Biography emil salima

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CINEPHILIA FILM & TV DEVELOPMENT WORKROOM

OFFICIAL SELECTION
November 2024 Workroom

Aina Carter
is a Toronto-based emerging filmmaker of Caribbean descent. She spent the majority of her life traveling the world and exploring other cultures, all of which have instilled in her a deep appreciation for diversity. A life-long lover of the arts, Aina dabbled in a variety of art forms such as dance, theatre, and visual art. However, while completing her degree in philosophy, she decided to pursue a career in filmmaking. Since then, Aina wrote and directed her debut film “Not Lost” which was screened at the Toronto Short Film Festival, and she then directed a virtual short titled “Operation: Primordial Wrath”. Having recently graduated with a BA in philosophy, Aina is currently pursuing her career in filmmaking with special attention to screenwriting. With a wealth of experience under her belt, Aina is excited for the next chapter of her career. 

Project title: Project Supersoldier
Amid a galactic war, an enslaved supersoldier, Model, working for the nefarious galactic

Emily Ruete

Sayyida of Zanzibar and Oman

Emily Ruete (born Sayyida Salama bint Said Al Said, Arabic: سلامة بنت سعيد آل سعيد; 30 August 1844 – 29 February 1924),[1] was a Princess of Zanzibar and Oman. She was the youngest of the 36 children of Said bin Sultan, Sultan of the Omani Empire. She is the author of Memoirs of an Arabian Princess from Zanzibar.

Early life in Zanzibar

Salama bint Said was born on 30 August 1844, the daughter of Sultan Said and Jilfidan, a Circassian slave of the Circassian slave trade, turned concubine (some accounts also note her as Georgian[2][3][4]). Her first years were spent in the huge Bet il Mtoni palace, by the sea about eight kilometres north of Stone Town. (The palace was mostly demolished in 1914.) She grew up bilingual in Arabic and Swahili. In 1851 she moved to Bet il Watoro, the house of her brother Majid bin Said of Zanzibar, the later sultan. Her brother taught her to ride and to shoot. In 1853 she moved with her mother to Bet il Tani. She secretly taught herself to write, a skill

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