Other sources that refer to this subject include Nedal Yousef, 'Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about [his book] 'Ayn al-Arab – One Hundred Years
"حسين أمين حسين"…يتحدث عن مدينة "عين العرب" في مئة عام.. (esyria.sy)Arxivləşdirilib 2018-08-17 at the Wayback Machine 9 April 2009.
Hussein Ali Hussein, "Ayn Al-Arab over a century" (عين العرب في مئة عام), Dar Al-Aqsa, Damascus (2007);
the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory (notably from one Mohamed Abdi, who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118, as well as "other centenarians from the region").
Kheder Khaddour, Kevin Mazur, The Struggle for Syria's Regions (MER269)Arxivləşdirilib 2015-07-14 at the Wayback Machine "State policy Arabized this town's name in the 1980s to ‘Ayn al-‘Arab, meaning the "spring of the Arabs." The running joke among residents is that the town has neither Arabs nor a spring."
Kheder Khaddour, Kevin Mazur, The Struggle for Syria's Regions (MER269)Arxivləşdirilib 2015-07-14 at the Wayback Machine "State policy Arabized this town's name in the 1980s to ‘Ayn al-‘Arab, meaning the "spring of the Arabs." The running joke among residents is that the town has neither Arabs nor a spring."
Other sources that refer to this subject include Nedal Yousef, 'Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about [his book] 'Ayn al-Arab – One Hundred Years
"حسين أمين حسين"…يتحدث عن مدينة "عين العرب" في مئة عام.. (esyria.sy)Arxivləşdirilib 2018-08-17 at the Wayback Machine 9 April 2009.
Hussein Ali Hussein, "Ayn Al-Arab over a century" (عين العرب في مئة عام), Dar Al-Aqsa, Damascus (2007);
the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory (notably from one Mohamed Abdi, who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118, as well as "other centenarians from the region").
Kheder Khaddour, Kevin Mazur, The Struggle for Syria's Regions (MER269)Arxivləşdirilib 2015-07-14 at the Wayback Machine "State policy Arabized this town's name in the 1980s to ‘Ayn al-‘Arab, meaning the "spring of the Arabs." The running joke among residents is that the town has neither Arabs nor a spring."
Kheder Khaddour, Kevin Mazur, The Struggle for Syria's Regions (MER269)Arxivləşdirilib 2015-07-14 at the Wayback Machine "State policy Arabized this town's name in the 1980s to ‘Ayn al-‘Arab, meaning the "spring of the Arabs." The running joke among residents is that the town has neither Arabs nor a spring."