- Åmål is a small town in Sweden.
Amal (Arabic: afwâju l-muqâwamati l-lubnâniya) is short for the Lebanese Resistance Detachments. Amal is the popular name, meaning "hope" in Arabic.
Amal became one of the most important Muslim militias during the Lebanese Civil War. Amal grew strong through its close ties with the Islamic regime of Iran, and the 300,000 Shi'i internal refugees from southern Lebanon after the Israeli bombings in the early 1980s. At its most the militia had 14,000 troops.
History
1974: The Movement of the Disinherited is formed by the Shi'i leader Imam Moussa Sader.
20 January 1975: The Lebanese Resistance Detachments are formed as a military wing of The Movement of the Disinherited, and came to be popularly known as Amal (from the acronym Afwaj al-Mouqawma Al-Lubnaniyya).
1982: Nabih Berri becomes one of the leaders of Amal. He was a Shi'i layman, but maintained close relations with Syria.
September 1991: With background in the Syrian controlled end of the Lebanese Civil War in October 1990, 2,800 Amal troops joined the Lebanese army.
Actually Amal have 9 deputees in the parliament and its president Nabih Berri is the president of the parliament.
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