User:Rahamatullah Noor
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rahmatullah_Noor_Rohingya_Muslim_religion_SUNNI_Arakan_State_Maungdaw_high_school.jpg== Rohingya Unite All Rohingya Solidarity Organisation == Rohingya Solidarity Organisation
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Rohingya-vision-news/293822384124100
Rohingya Unit of arakan state and Malaysia bangladesh pakistan saudi arabia and india .Rohingya rebellion in Western Burma dear rohingya people All [1]a member of an ethnic minority. Rohingya * rohingya muslim genocide by buddhist 969 (mouk)
The term "Rohingya" comes from Rohang, the Rohingya word for the state of Arakan, from where the Rohingya originate. Though some Rohingya historians, like Khalilur Rahma, contend that the term Rohingya may be derived from the Arabic word Rahma, meaning 'mercy,' others consider this unlikely. The term is supposed to originate back to a shipwreck in the 8th century CE. Accordingly, after an Arab ship wrecked near Ramree Island, Arab traders were ordered to be executed by the Arakanese king. Then, they shouted in their language, 'Rahma'. Hence, these people were called 'Rahma'. Gradually it changed from Rahma to Rhohang and finally to Rohingyas.
This claim has been disputed by Jahiruddin Ahmed and Nazir Ahmed, former president and Secretary of the Arakan Muslim Conference respectively. They argued that shipwreck Muslims are currently called 'Thambu Kya' Muslims, and currently reside along the Arakan sea shore. If the term Rohingya was indeed derived from that group of Muslims, "Thambu Kyas" would have been the first group to be known as Rohingyas. According to them, Rohingyas were descendants of inhabitants of Ruha in Afghanistan. Another historian, MA Chowdhury argued that among the Muslim populations in Myanmar, the term 'Mrohaung' (Old Arakanese Kingdom) was corrupted to Rohang. And thus inhabitants of the region are called Rohingya.
Burmese historians such as Khin Maung Saw have claimed that the term 'Rohingya' was unknown before the 1950s.Rohingya villages Another historian, Dr Maung Maung, notes that the word Rohingya is not used in the 1824 census, conducted by the British. Historian Aye Chan from Kanda University of International Studies states that the term Rohingya was created by descendants of Bengalis in the 1950s who migrated into Arakan during colonial times. He also holds
that the term cannot be found in any historical source in any language before the 1950s. However, he accepts that Muslim communities have lived in Arakan for centuries, many of whom settled in the region during the Kingdom of Mrauk U, when Arakan enjoyed strong political, military and trade relations with the Bengal Sultanate.
Arakan history expert Dr Jacques P. Leider points out that the term Rooinga was in fact used in a late 18th century report published by the British Francis Buchanan-Hamilton. In his 1799 article “A Comparative Vocabulary of Some of the Languages Spoken in the Burma Empire,” Buchanan-Hamilton stated: "I shall now add three dialects, spoken in the Burma Empire, but evidently derived from the language of the Hindu nation. The first is that spoken by the Mohammedans, who have long settled in Arakan, and who call themselves Rooinga, or natives of Arakan." Leider also adds that the etymology of the word "does not say anything about politics." He adds that "You use this term for yourself as a political label to give yourself identity in the 20th century. Now how is this term used since the 1950s? It is clear that people who use it want to give this identity to the community that live there."[2] ** unite Rohingya Unite All Rahamatullah Noor [[http://SUNNI_Arakan_State_Maungdaw SUNNI_Arakan_State_Maungdaw_high_school.jpg]]
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Rahamatullah_Noor&action=edit