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"Ranil Gemunu Abeynaike (12 February 1955 – 21 February 2012) was a Sri Lankan cricketer. Abeynaike was a right-handed batsman who bowled slow left-arm orthodox. Born at Mount Lavinia, he was educated at S. Thomas' College Mount Lavinia, in the Dominion of Ceylon (today Sri Lanka). He was the son of Orville Abeynaike. International career Abeynaike made his first-class debut for the Mercantile Cricket Association against the Pakistan Under-25s. His first first-class match for Sri Lanka came against Tamil Nadu in the 1974/75 Gopalan Trophy. A further first-class appearance followed in 1976, when he was a part of the Sri Lanka Board President's XI team which played the touring Pakistanis. A year later he appeared for Sri Lanka in a first-class match against the touring Marylebone Cricket Club, who he also made his List A debut against. English County Cricket In 1978, Abeynaike joined English county Bedfordshire, making his debut against Cambridgeshire in that seasons Minor Counties Championship. Following the 1978 season, he returned to Sri Lanka where he made two List A appearances for the Sri Lanka Board President's XI against the touring West Indians. Over the coming seasons he continued to play in England for Bedfordshire, playing Minor counties cricket from 1978 to 1982 (with the exception of 1980), making 38 Minor Counties Championship appearances, as well as a single List A appearance in the 1982 NatWest Trophy against Somerset. Sinhalese Sports Club By 1983, Sri Lanka had Test status, but Abeynaike never gained full international honours. He played for the Sri Lanka Board President's XI in 1983 against the touring Australians, he later joined the Sinhalese Sports Club, who he made his debut for in a List A match in the final of the 1988/89 Brown's Trophy against the Nondescripts Cricket Club. He made a further List A appearance the following season, in a repeat of the previous seasons final. The Sinhalese Sports Club won both matches. In the 1989/90 season, Abeynaike made eight first-class appearances for the club, the last of which came against the Cambrians Sports Club. Career statistics In his first-class career, he played fourteen matches, scoring 412 runs at an average of 24.23, with a high score of 66. With the ball, he took 9 wickets at a bowling average of 40.00, with best figures of 6/131. In List A cricket, he scored 136 runs at an average of 136.00 (this inflated average was down to three not outs in his four innings), with a high score of 46 not out. With the ball, he took 2 wickets at an average of 57.50, with best figures of 2/21. Later life and death Abeynaike acted as an international commentator on cricket for United Arab Emirates based sports broadcaster TEN Sports from 2004 onwards. He died at a hospital in Colombo on 21 February 2012, following a heart attack. References External links * Category:1955 births Category:2012 deaths Category:People from Dehiwala- Mount Lavinia Category:Sri Lankan cricketers Category:Bedfordshire cricketers Category:Sinhalese Sports Club cricketers Category:Sri Lankan cricket commentators "
"Lane in Bab al-Huta Map of the Muslim Quarter Bab Huta is a neighborhood in the Muslim Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem to the north of the Haram al- Sharif (Temple Mount). It is named after the gate in the Haram compound which is Arabic for "Forgiveness Gate". History In the late 15th century, Mujir ad-Din described it as one of the largest quarters in Jerusalem. A census taken by the Ottoman authority registered only Muslims in the quarter. At the beginning of the 20th century, the quarter had boundaries defined as follows: * North and East - the city walls between St Stephen's and Herod gates. * South - the north side of the Temple Mount. * West - Zawiyat el-Hunud Street, 'Aqabet er-Rahibat, Bab el-Ghawanima Street. Around the end of the 19th century, Jews were a majority of Jerusalem's population, and began to spread out of the Jewish Quarter into the Muslim Quarter, including Bab al-Huta. Demographics The neighborhood is considered one of the poorest areas in the Old City. It is home to the Dom Romani community of the Old City, known in Arabic as al-Nawar, led by mukhtar Abed-Alhakim Mohammed Deeb Salim.Selig, Abe. Jerusalem’s Herod’s Gate receives face-lift. 06/29/2010. Jerusalem PostA People Apart: The Romani community seeks recognition. By Eetta Prince-Gibson. Dom Research Center. 2001Danny Rubinstein. People / Steve Sabella: Blurring the lines. Haaretz. 2005Joseph B. Glass and Rassem Khamaisi. Report on the Socio-Economic Conditions in the Old City of Jerusalem. Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto. p.4 References Category:Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem Category:Nawar people Category:Romani communities in Asia Category:Romani in Israel Category:Romani in the State of Palestine "
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