This term may have first appeared in print in an article by in which he writes of "the suburban-exile kaffiyeh kinderlach of , more Palestinian by far than the Palestinians" in their criticism of Israel | In , the red-and-white keffiyeh is strongly associated with the country and its heritage, because the red color was introduced by the Jordanian Bedouins under British rule, where it is known as the shemagh mhadab |
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" Westerners in keffiyeh [ ] at , north of , in 1917 British Colonel better known as Lawrence of Arabia was probably the best-known Western wearer of the keffiyeh and during his involvement in the in | [ ] Also in the people used the keffiyeh to show their solidarity with the |
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This term may have first appeared in print in an article by in which he writes of "the suburban-exile kaffiyeh kinderlach of , more Palestinian by far than the Palestinians" in their criticism of Israel | Early on, he had made it his personal trademark to drape the scarf over his right shoulder only, arranging it in the rough shape of a , to resemble the outlines of historic |
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from Arab American blog Kabobfest• The scarf gained popularity during the Iran-Iraq war as a sign of Shi'a resistance against Saddam | , checkered shawl worn in Cambodia and the Mekong region of Vietnam• This image of Lawrence was later popularized by the film epic about him, , in which he was played by |
The lexicon includes more references explaining what a sudra is on page 962.