Draft:Foad Alrawi

Foad Muhsen Alrawi

Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq

In position 7/2/2007 - 2/3/2008 President Jalal Talabani

Vice President Tariq Al Hashemi

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki

Administrative Advisor to the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq In position 6/4/2006 - 7/2/2007

Director of General Administration in the Iraqi Islamic Party In position 2004 - 6/4/2006 Member of the political bureau of the Iraqi Islamic Party

In position 2004 - 6/4/2006 General Manager of the General Railway Company In position (unknown) personal information Birth name: Fouad Mohsen Hamash Abdel Rawi Birth in 1940 (age 84-85 years) Anbar, Iraq

Nationality Iraqi Religion Sunni Muslim

The children are six sons (Farouk, Miqdad, Salah al-Din, Suhaib, Ammar, Anas) practical life Alma mater Baghdad University

Occupation Political, administrative and economic

Party Iraqi Islamic Party - Iraqi Accord Front

Arabic and English languages

The current Muslim Brotherhood

Locations Website: Instagram: @dr.foad_alrawi Twitter: @DrFoadAlrawi

Fouad Mohsen Hamash Abdul Rawi (born in Anbar Rawa in 1940), an Iraqi politician who served as Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq and his administrative advisor. He was one of the leaders of the Iraqi Islamic Party, which was considered the political front for the Muslim Brotherhood in Iraq.[1] He announced his resignation from the position of Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq on 2/3/2008. A gift was presented by the Vice President of the Republic, Mr. Tariq Al-Hashimi, after he agreed to resign, in appreciation of the efforts and services of Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi in the position. His upbringing[edit] The actual date of birth is the year (1939) and not the official date that is recorded in the civil status identity card (1940). The latter was headed by his middle brother, Abdul Malik, who was born in (1937), and his older brother, Rashid, may God have mercy on him, who was born in (1928). Among them were two daughters who died in their first year. I was born in the city of Rawa, which seems far from events, as it is more than three hundred kilometers away from Baghdad, the capital, and more than two hundred kilometers away from Ramadi, the center of the governorate. With the weakness of communications and its distance from transportation, while Europe was raging in World War II and was divided into two fronts, a front representing the Axis powers, led by Germany, and a front representing the Allies, led by Britain, and it was the only way to hear news about it These are a few of the radios that are only available in some large cafes. Some of the homes were limited to the rich, so the main concern of the people was to hear the news of this frightening world war, as the tragedies of the First World War still cast their shadows on social life, as it affected many people Of its men, and many of them were lost. My father, may God have mercy on him, was returning from that deadly war, and he was saved, thanks to God. From its horrors, he returned to Rawah safely. When he was a young man, he told him how he participated in that great war in 1914 AD, describing the days of devastating battles with the Russians on the Turkish Van Front in unbearable weather conditions of snow, cold, hunger, lack of equipment and fortifications, and the lack of interest of the Union and Progress government Army supplies, supply and armament On the outskirts of the Ottoman Empire. He was born in a modest house located in an alley (Darb al-Muhsana), built of plaster and stone, and its roof made of tree trunks, plaster, and stones. If it rained, no corner of it would escape the other, as water from the ceiling would fall into it. The general conditions during the Second World War were difficult, people were in distress and their livelihood was almost equal, and the health conditions were more complex because there was no hospital or doctor in Rawa at that time. Rather, there was a dispensary that lacked medicine and those who became ill inevitably fell ill To cross the Euphrates River to go to the simple hospital in the city This increases the patient's suffering in these dark circumstances. Scientific life[edit] Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi joined Al-Rashideen Primary School in 1945 and then moved to the First Primary School. After completing it, he joined middle school in Anah and then middle school. After that, he traveled to Baghdad on 08/10/1958 and obtained admission to the College of Commerce and Economics. – Evening Department – ​​University of Baghdad. He joined the first year – Evening Department – ​​in the fall of 1958. Jobs and responsibilities[edit] Some time after his graduation, Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi took a job in the Directorate of the General Railway Company in Iraq and became its general manager. He practiced his advocacy activities secretly because the government prevented any activity of any Islamic group, and the situation continued like this until the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime in 1997. 2003 During the work of Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi as General Manager of the General Railway Company in Iraq Political career[edit] Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi became a political activist within the framework of the Islamic movement. There was no Islamic party. He started in the sixties, but there were signs of Islamic action. In 1958-1959 there was friction with the communists and nationalist parties, and he participated in demonstrations and hung banners. Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi was active in the Iraqi Islamic Party at the beginning of his political career. He became a member of the party's political bureau, and in June 2004, after the fall of President Saddam Hussein's regime, Dr. Fuad Mohsen al-Rawi was chosen to become director of the general administration of the Iraqi Islamic Party until 2006. In 2006, following the party’s victory in the December 2005 elections for the Iraqi Accord Front, Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi was chosen to be an administrative advisor to the Vice President of the Republic, Mr. Tariq Al-Hashimi, in 2006, and then he became Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic, Mr. Tariq Al-Hashemi, in 2007. Iraqi Islamic Party[edit] He joined the Iraqi Islamic Party, and in 2004 he was elected to be a member of the party’s political bureau and then director of the party’s general administration. • Party popularity Some media outlets, including the Iraqi Media News Agency, Al-Zaman and Al-Bayna Al-Jadidah newspapers, and others, published a statement attributed to Dr. Mohsen Abdel Hamid, Chairman of the Central Shura Council of the Iraqi Islamic Party, said that one of the reasons for the decline in the party’s popularity in the March 7 elections is that the efforts of the party’s leadership were not at the required level. Administrative Advisor to the Office of the Iraqi Vice President[edit] In the elections of December 2005, after an electoral campaign in the (Iraqi Accord Front), she obtained (44) seats in the Iraqi Council of Representatives, and was appointed as an administrative advisor to the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq, Mr. Tariq Al-Hashimi, after he won the elections. Meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq[edit] One year after assuming the position of administrative advisor to the Iraqi Vice President, he assumed the position of Director General of the Office of the Vice President of the Republic in 7/2/2007. While receiving tribal sheikhs at the Republican Palace America and the Islamic World Forum Conference 2008[edit] Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi participated in the America and the Islamic World Forum conference as a representative of the State of Iraq and the Iraqi Islamic Party, which was held during the period 02/16 and 02/18 of 2008.[2] A photo with the late President Dr. Mohamed Morsi at a conference in Algeria in 2005-2006 His works[3][edit] Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi wrote many books during his life, including: 1- The book “Islam and the Great Challenges in the Twenty-First Century” 2- The book “The Babi and Baha’i Movement is a Destructive Movement” 3- The book “Food for the Soul in the Qur’an and the Sunnah” 4- The book “The Easy Accounting System” 5- The Book of Saba and its Role in Sabotaging the Islamic Faith 6- The Book of Islamic Thought Confronting Western Thought 7- The Concept of Jihad in Arab-Islamic Thought 8- The Prince of Princes Amer bin al-Jarrah (may God be pleased with him) 9- The Encyclopedia of the History of the Muslim Brotherhood in Iraq.[ 4] See also[edit] • Tariq Al Hashemi • The Iraqi Islamic Party External links[edit] • Links to Dr. Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi’s statements and press interviews: • Al Jazeera Channel[5] • Qabas newspaper[6] • Radio Free Iraq[7] • Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper[8] • Al-Raya newspaper[9] • Al-Rai newspaper[10] • Al-Safir newspaper[11] • Al-Wasat newspaper[12] • Iraq Cultural Network[13] • Kona newspaper[14] • Voltaire Network[15] • Elaph newspaper[16] • Camel network[17] • Al-Dustour newspaper[18] References[edit] 1. ^ Fouad Mohsen Al-Rawi, Fouad. Memory of years and years. 2. ^ “America-Islamic World Forum Conference 2008” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-07-10. 3. ^ “Noor Electronic Library.” 4. ^ “Arab Family Library”. 5. ^ “Al Jazeera Channel”. 6. ^ “Qabas Newspaper”. 7. ^ “Radio Free Iraq”. 8. ^ “Asharq Al-Awsat Newspaper”. 9. ^ “Al-Raya Newspaper.” 10. ^ “Al-Rai newspaper”. 11. ^ “Al-Safir Newspaper.” 12. ^ “Al-Wasat Newspaper”. 13. ^ “Iraq Cultural Network.” 14. ^ “Kuna newspaper”. 15. ^ “Voltaire Network.” 16. ^ “Elaf newspaper.” 17. ^ “Camel Network.” 18. ^ “Al-Dustour Newspaper”.== References ==