what is the difference between a Musilm and an Indian lol..he is a Muslim and an Indian. Exactly. Being Muslim is his religious identity, and being Indian is his national identity. They can and do coexist.
As of May 2014, the sports minister of Maharashtra is Shri Padmakar Vijaysing Valvi. Maharashtra is known for being an Indian state.
You Wouldnt Like Get Along Or Have Anything In Common Apart From Being A Muslim
The prime minister of Australia is chosen by a majority of the members of the house of representative's. The members of the house of representatives get there by being voted for by the general population.
The biography for Malcolm X include him being born on May 19, 1925 in Nebraska. He was an activist as well as a Muslim minister.
The future president, Thomas Jefferson was serving as the US minister to France while the Constitution was being debated. This is why he did not sign it even though he was mostly in favor of it.
there are seven fundamental rights , the right to education being the most recent.
Muslim-Americans do not eat unique foods by dint of being Muslims, but rather they eat the unique foods of their homelands. An Iraqi-American who is Muslim will eat roughly the same foods as an Iraqi-American who is Jewish or Christian and an Indian-American who is Muslim will eat roughly the same foods a Hindu Indian-American, but a Muslim Iraqi-American and a Muslim Indian-American will eat foods that are very different from on another, because they come from different places.The only things that Christian-Americans eat that Muslim-Americans do not are pork and alcohol. (Although a significant number of Muslim-Americans do eat pork and/or alcohol in contravention with Islamic doctrine.)
Zakir Naik is a Muslim by birth and besides being a Indian public speaker he is also founder and president of the Islamic Research Foundation
As of May 2014, the sports minister of Maharashtra is Shri Padmakar Vijaysing Valvi. Maharashtra is known for being an Indian state.
None of them helped write the US Constitution. None of them were in the US. At the time it was being debated, John Adams was serving as minister to England, Jefferson was serving as minister to France and Thomas Paine was in France during the beginning of the French Revolution.
Being a minister.