Mariam Nour
Mariam Nour (Arabic: مريم نور) (born May 24, 1936) is a Lebanese television personality who discusses food and lifestyle issues in Arab media.[1][2]
Mariam Nour | |
---|---|
مريم نور | |
Born | May 24, 1936 |
Citizenship | American, Lebanese |
Occupation | TV Personality |
Life and career
Nour was born in Douma, Lebanon as Marie Yeghiayan to an Armenian father and Lebanese mother. She traveled to the United States where she was taught by Osho and Michio Kushi.
With her return to Lebanon in the late 1990s, Nour brought new age ideas to the Arab world. She presented many programs on the Lebanese Al Jadeed (New TV) station and appeared at various times on Al Jazeera Arabic and other Arab stations promoting her views and lifestyle.[3] Nour is a dual citizen of Lebanon and the United States.
gollark: This is indeed HIGHLY transparent.
gollark: This is documented, yes.
gollark: Maybe they just made it count all the users and never expected it to be a problem.
gollark: ... and the N/A ones.
gollark: I wonder what the 30-200 ones are, I certainly don't operate any of those.
References
- Light Luise (1996). Food for a Saint. Vegetarian Times September 1996
- Povoledo, Elisabetta (October 22, 2004). A politically-charged food fest. New York Times
- Sussman, Anna (August 16, 2007). A Lebanese chef's vision: Make falafel, not war. New York Times
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.