Introduction of Terrorism and the Middle Eastern Culture In 1993 Harvard's political scientist named Samuel Huntington wrote a controversial article entitled "Clash of Civilizations" in diplomacy. At this point, the Gulf War is still fresh among most American minds. The most serious problems at the time were the Sudan Hussein threat, the development of nuclear weapons, and the strategic arms reduction treaty. A few months later, the World Trade Center was blown up, six people died, and more injured.
In the midst of political turmoil, many religions and cultures developed and prospered in the Middle East. Three monotheism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam were formed here and today dominated religion and culture in the Middle East. The majority of people in the Middle East are Muslims - but Judaism and Christianity hold a very strong believer. However, Christianity and Muslims are divided into sects, sects represented by the Middle East, increasing the diversity and complexity of religion, this division is deceiving.
Regarding the Middle East, there are two common mistakes. The first is to confuse the Arab world with the Middle East. The Middle East is a diverse region with multiple languages and cultures. Most inhabitants of the area speak Arabic, but some countries in the Middle East, including Turkey, Iran and Israel are not the majority of Arabic. Of course, there are minority communities in majority Arab countries as well, Arabic is not their mother tongue including Kurdish, Berber and many other groups. At the same time, many Arabic speaking users live in Sudan to the United States, the majority other than Arabs. There are many duplications, but the Middle East and the Arab world are not the same thing!
Arabian coffee is deeply rooted in the cultures and traditions of the Middle East and Arabia, the most popular coffee in the Middle East. It began in Yemen and eventually began in the Middle East heading for Egypt, Levant and Turkey in the mid 16th century. Arabian coffee is an intangible cultural heritage of Arab countries recognized by UNESCO. The word "coffee" was entered in English via Dutch coffee in 1582, borrowed from Ottoman Turkish kahve, then borrowed Arabic قهوة (qahwa, "coffee, brewing"). The word qahwah may refer to qahiya's diet that initially claims to be an appetite suppressant (Arabic: قهي, translit. qahiya, lit.). The name qahwah is not used for fruits and plants (products in this area), it is called bunn in Arabic. Semitic's root color is "dark", which is the natural name of the drink.