Oman Professional League || Al Nahda v Dhofar Salalah || عمان دوري عمانتل للمحترفين النهضة ضد ظفار.
Sporting Cultural Club Al-Oruba Zabid is a Yemeni football club based in San‘a’, Yemen. The club was founded in 2008.
Al-Orouba Sporting Club " , or just plainly as Al-Orouba) is an Omani sports club based in Sur, Oman. The club is currently playing in the Oman Professional League, top division of Oman Football Association.
Al-Orobah Football Club is a Saudi Arabian football club based in Sakakah, playing in the second tier of Saudi football, the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League. They won the 2012–13 Saudi First Division and were promoted to the Saudi Professional League, the top level of Saudi Arabian football for the first time in their history.
Al Nahda is a locality in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE). Located in eastern Dubai in Deira, Al Nahda forms part of Dubai's eastern border with the emirate of Sharjah.
Al Nahda National Schools is a private English language school in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It is divided into a boys' school and a girls' school.
Al-Nahda was a cultural renaissance that began in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Egypt, then later moving to Ottoman-ruled Arabic-speaking regions including Lebanon, Syria and others. It is often regarded as a period of intellectual modernization and reform.
Al-Nahda Club is an Omani sports club based in Al-Buraimi, Oman. The club is currently playing in the Oman Professional League, top division of Oman Football Association.
Al Nahda is a Saudi football club from Al-Khobar, Dammam.
Nahda, Hama is a Syrian village located in Masyaf Nahiyah in Masyaf District, Hama.
Al Oroba Street is one of the main streets of the city of Bayda in Libya as the length of the street, 7.5 km and is divided into five sections: Al Oroba 1 to Al Oroba Street 5. Street is going through several neighborhoods Al Oroba inspired neighborhood Alcaoh Andalusia, will also meet in the street Al Oroba many of the main streets: Omar Mukhtar Street, or what is known as Street Hospital and Liberty Avenue and Victory Street.
Al-Uruba is a Basic People's Congress administrative division of Benghazi, Libya.
Al Urubah was a pro-Muammar Gaddafi Libyan television station. Following the fall of Tripoli in August, 2011, it broadcast messages from the deposed leader and his information minister, Moussa Ibrahim.
Al-Oruba Means unity or belonging: