Asmahan

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ahwa 06:11 Tools
Yalli hawak 04:32 Tools
Enta hataraf 06:31 Tools
Ya habibi taala (Mon amour, viens vite) 05:32 Tools
Ya Habibi Taala Elhaani 05:35 Tools
Ya Layali Elbichar 05:39 Tools
Ayouh Ennaimou 06:36 Tools
Layali elouns 11:06 Tools
Ya touyour 06:44 Tools
Elward 06:10 Tools
Dakhalt marra 05:27 Tools
Ana Elli Astahel 05:24 Tools
Ya Habeebee Taala Elhanee 05:24 Tools
Ya Habibi Taala 05:30 Tools
Aleik Salat Allah 06:15 Tools
Sahirtou Toul El Leil 06:06 Tools
Elouyoun 05:44 Tools
Emta Tioud 06:29 Tools
Askiniha 06:25 Tools
Layta Lel Barrak 05:47 Tools
Layalee El Once 11:00 Tools
Konti elamani 05:49 Tools
Naweit Adari 06:12 Tools
Ya Reitni Teir 05:34 Tools
Ya Habibi Ta'ala 04:58 Tools
Imta hatiraf 05:35 Tools
Dakhalti Marrah 05:18 Tools
Layta Lel Barqi 05:42 Tools
Ya habiibii taala [Come My Darling] 05:32 Tools
Ya Dirati 05:42 Tools
Farraq Ma Beinna 06:00 Tools
Ash'inha 06:39 Tools
Kanli amal 06:33 Tools
Ya Habibi Taala - Remastered 05:34 Tools
ISHAK YA BOULBOUL 05:18 Tools
Emta Hataaraf 06:33 Tools
Ya Habibi Tal Ala 05:30 Tools
Sahirtou toul el leil (J'ai veillé toute la nuit) 06:04 Tools
Ya habibi 05:35 Tools
Layta lel Barrak (La nuit de la chance) 05:46 Tools
Ahwi 05:44 Tools
Eina Ellayali 05:17 Tools
Alayka salate Allah 06:14 Tools
Emta Tioud (La beauté de l'amour est immense) 06:27 Tools
Ahedni Ya Qalbi 08:21 Tools
riji'tilek 06:31 Tools
Aleik salat Allah (Ô toi qui as créé le beau) 05:45 Tools
Ya Habibi (Remastered) 05:37 Tools
Layali al onoss 06:41 Tools
Ya layali elbichar (La nuit de la bonne nouvelle) 05:36 Tools
Ahwa (La beauté du monde) 06:10 Tools
naoueït adari 06:12 Tools
Emta Tioud - Remastered 05:40 Tools
Konti Elamani (Tu as été mon espoir) 05:21 Tools
Ya habibi taâla 05:34 Tools
farraq ma beïna 06:00 Tools
Layali el unse fi vienna 11:05 Tools
Sahirtou Toul El Leil - Remastered 06:13 Tools
Layali al ons 11:04 Tools
Amta Ha Taaraf 06:21 Tools
Riji't Lek 06:30 Tools
Emta Hateraf 06:18 Tools
Kan Li Amal 06:24 Tools
Emta Hataarf 00:00 Tools
Ya Habeebi Ta'al 05:34 Tools
Ya reitni teir - Remastered 11:04 Tools
Layta lil baraak [I Wish the Lightning Had] 05:45 Tools
Ya Tayuor 06:46 Tools
Ana Elli Estahel 05:40 Tools
Ahwa - Remastered 06:29 Tools
Echamss ghabet (feat. Farid Elatrache) 06:25 Tools
El Ward 06:13 Tools
Layta Lel Barrak - Remastered 04:34 Tools
Ya Toyoor 06:34 Tools
Ahla binour el aïn (feat. Farid Elatrache) 08:12 Tools
Askiniha [I Fell in Love with Her] 06:27 Tools
Ya Nar Fouadi 05:58 Tools
ر يا حبيبي تعالى 00:00 Tools
Ya habibi taali 06:25 Tools
Hal Tayyama Al Banu 27:17 Tools
Fi Youm Ma Chouftek 05:56 Tools
Layali el bachar 05:42 Tools
Emta HaTaraf 06:30 Tools
Konti Elamani - Remastered 06:30 Tools
Kilma Ya Nour El Ouyoun 05:35 Tools
Ya habibi taal 05:32 Tools
Elouyoun - Remastered 06:35 Tools
Ya Le Ainak Wayali 27:15 Tools
Kelma Ya Nour Elouyoun 05:44 Tools
Ahwa [I Love] 06:14 Tools
Imta tiuud [When Will You Come back?] 06:27 Tools
Yalli hawaak [Oh You, Whose Love] 04:34 Tools
Ya diratii [Oh My Folk] 06:29 Tools
Asqenha 06:28 Tools
Ya Layali Elbichar - Remastered 06:35 Tools
Dakhalat Marra 05:28 Tools
Hal Tayam Al Baan 27:23 Tools
Ana Ele Astahel 05:40 Tools
Ya Habiibii Taala 06:35 Tools
Nawit adri al omi 05:37 Tools
Nawet Adare Alamy 06:20 Tools
Aluyuun [The Eyes] 05:41 Tools
Sahirtou (Remastered) 05:40 Tools
Isqiniha babi anta wa omi 06:18 Tools
Hadith Ainean 27:08 Tools
Alward [The Roses] 06:12 Tools
Ya dayrety 06:29 Tools
Fakar Ma Beynana 06:07 Tools
Ahwa (Remastered) 06:15 Tools
Ana Ahwa 18:10 Tools
Ya Farheti Yom Ma Teguini 06:35 Tools
Layaali aluns [Merry Nights] 11:08 Tools
Ayouha Al Naem 06:33 Tools
Asqiniha 06:26 Tools
Farraq Ma Benna Leh Ezzaman 01:30 Tools
Nawit Alo Nci 00:00 Tools
Cana Lee Amal 06:47 Tools
Ya Gamal El Warid 06:06 Tools
Yalli Hawak Shaghel Bali 04:35 Tools
ياللي هواك 06:35 Tools
Yally Hawak 04:34 Tools
Sahirtou 06:08 Tools
Fi Youm Mashofek 05:53 Tools
Asqeneeha 06:26 Tools
Ayouha annaaim [You, the Sleeping One] 06:36 Tools
Farraq ma be na 06:36 Tools
Leyl Beraq 06:11 Tools
Emta-Hataarf 05:40 Tools
Ayou Na El Imoo 04:57 Tools
El Leil 06:34 Tools
Konti elamani [You Were the Wishes] 05:21 Tools
Ya layaali el bushr [My Nights of Joy] 05:40 Tools
يا طيور 06:46 Tools
الورد 06:11 Tools
Elouyoun (Remastered) 05:40 Tools
Layali Alons 10:49 Tools
Ya habibi taala elhani 06:31 Tools
Farq Ma Baynina Li Zaman 04:46 Tools
Aleik Salat Allah (Remastered) 06:19 Tools
Faraq Mabena Alzaman 05:59 Tools
يا ليالي البشر 05:37 Tools
Ya layali 05:39 Tools
Farraq Ma Beina 05:59 Tools
Ya-Layaly-El-Bashar 05:38 Tools
Kakhalate mara fi janina 06:02 Tools
Layali Onoj 00:00 Tools
Isqiniha bab anta nwaomi 06:37 Tools
Ana Elli Astahil 05:30 Tools
Kaana lii amal [There Was Hope in Me] 06:34 Tools
امتي هاتعرف 05:24 Tools
Ya Toyour 06:47 Tools
امتى هتعرف 00:00 Tools
Ya Lae Hawak Shaghel Bali 00:00 Tools
Regue'te Lak Ya Habibi 00:00 Tools
Ya Layali (Remastered) 06:31 Tools
Ya-Tayuor 06:31 Tools
Rejeet Lak 06:11 Tools
Ana El-Lee Astahill 05:37 Tools
Layalli el unse fi Vienna 06:39 Tools
Majnoun Layla 01:30 Tools
Farq mabaynina lih azamane 05:39 Tools
أهوى 05:23 Tools
Ya-dayrety 06:29 Tools
Aleik salat allahv [A Prayer for You] 06:12 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 2 06:37 Tools
Konti Elamani (Remastered) 06:12 Tools
Fakar May Beynana 06:07 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh 06:01 Tools
Ya layali al bachar 04:46 Tools
ليت للبراق عينا 05:47 Tools
Nimekuja Pasi Haya (Lucky Star) 03:29 Tools
Ya Layali Elbichr 00:00 Tools
Dakhalti marra 06:39 Tools
Nawet-Adare-Alamy 05:59 Tools
Intisar achabbab 05:36 Tools
Kelmet Ya Nour El Eyoun 05:44 Tools
Sahirtou tuul al leil [I Stayed up all Night] 06:05 Tools
ياحبيبي تعالي الحقني 05:32 Tools
يا حبيبي تعال الحقني 05:35 Tools
نويت أداري آلامي 06:20 Tools
دخلت مرة في جنينة 02:08 Tools
El-Ward 06:33 Tools
Layaly El Ons 00:00 Tools
يا بدع الورد 05:24 Tools
Ya-Habiby-Taal 05:23 Tools
Al Ward 05:42 Tools
إيمتى حتعرف 05:30 Tools
Ya Habiibii Taala (Come My Darling) 05:34 Tools
Layata el Barrak (Remastered) 11:04 Tools
Elosra Elalaweya 02:48 Tools
Lit lilbrak aina 05:51 Tools
Kan Le Amal 05:51 Tools
Aleik salat illah 06:01 Tools
Leyt lilberaq 11:08 Tools
Yom Ma Shoefek 05:25 Tools
Ena elli astaahel [I’m the Worthy One] 05:41 Tools
Yalli-Hawak 05:41 Tools
Ya Habibi Taala Elhaqni 01:30 Tools
Dakhalt_Mra_Fe_Genyna 02:08 Tools
Ka Khalate Mara mi Jara 06:01 Tools
Emta Hato'rof 03:29 Tools
Naouit Adari 06:11 Tools
Yali Fi Hobak Baneet El Amani 04:35 Tools
Nawayt adari alami 06:23 Tools
Nawet Adari Alami 04:46 Tools
Layali el ins 04:46 Tools
كلمة يا نور العيون 05:46 Tools
Laita Lil Barraqi 05:42 Tools
Mahlaha Eichet Elfallah 06:29 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 4 11:05 Tools
ياطيور 05:24 Tools
Laita Lilbarraqi 00:00 Tools
يللي هواك شاغل بالي 05:36 Tools
Kan_Le_Amal_Mp3hat 06:38 Tools
كان لي أمل 05:36 Tools
Ya Habibi Taâala Ilha'ni 05:41 Tools
Enta hataraf [You’ll Know] 06:31 Tools
El_Ward 06:12 Tools
Alayka sallat Allah 06:01 Tools
Farq ma baina azzaman 06:07 Tools
Ya Reit Tedouki Elli Fi Albi 06:07 Tools
Ya habiti taala 06:20 Tools
Leita lilbarak 06:07 Tools
Dakhalt Mara El Jinaina 05:30 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 7 02:14 Tools
Magnoun Layla 11:42 Tools
كنت الاماني 05:22 Tools
Farak ma beinana 11:07 Tools
Kont Elamani Men Zaman 05:25 Tools
Aalaik Salat Allah 06:01 Tools
Asqeneha 02:37 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 3 06:29 Tools
Ayna Allayali Alawaty Sababat Saqami 05:18 Tools
Ana Ely Astahil 05:26 Tools
Ya rit tedouqi 06:37 Tools
Ya firqat youm ma thabbin 06:22 Tools
Auoha_El_Naim 06:22 Tools
رجعت لك 06:07 Tools
في يوم ما شوفك راضية عني 06:07 Tools
Nini Dawa Ya Mahaba (Lucky Star) 05:36 Tools
Layali-El-Onns 05:42 Tools
Emta-Hatearaf 05:42 Tools
Intissar Echabab 07:46 Tools
يا نار فؤادي 07:46 Tools
Yalle-Hawak 05:42 Tools
Echems Ghabet Anouar'ha 06:17 Tools
Ya Layali El Bashar 05:42 Tools
ليالي الأنس في فيينا 05:24 Tools
أين الليالي 05:36 Tools
Ayouha annaem 11:07 Tools
Asmaa Elbulbul Youghani 06:28 Tools
Allil 06:28 Tools
I Love (Coffee Song) Part 1 02:37 Tools
Ishak ya boulboul - Remastered 06:29 Tools
Layali elbachar 06:29 Tools
Ya Tyoor 06:37 Tools
Ena elli astaahel [I���m the Worthy One] 06:07 Tools
Enta hataraf [You���ll Know] 06:07 Tools
Dakaitou marhou fi djanina 06:07 Tools
Ya layli el bachar 06:01 Tools
Fark mabayna lih ezaman 06:01 Tools
Ya Layali Elbichri 05:35 Tools
Generique 02:14 Tools
Ya Dirati Idi Fi Idek 00:00 Tools
Ellil 06:13 Tools
Ishak ya boulboul (Liban) 05:24 Tools
Ya tayour 06:45 Tools
Emta Hate3raf 05:36 Tools
La Yali Elouns 11:05 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 6 11:08 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 5 06:29 Tools
Ehlefli 11:05 Tools
ايها النائم 06:29 Tools
Esqini 06:29 Tools
SMS Song 06:01 Tools
Kifaya achoufek 06:01 Tools
Layaly-El-Ons 06:01 Tools
Ya Habiby Taala 05:34 Tools
Riji tilek 05:34 Tools
عليك صلاة الله وسلامه 05:34 Tools
Oua oumi houwa 05:34 Tools
Kan Ly Amal 05:34 Tools
إسقنيها 05:34 Tools
Alik salat allah 00:00 Tools
Ya habibi taala el haani 00:00 Tools
Askiniha hbibi anta 00:00 Tools
Ya Teyour 06:46 Tools
Asquiniha 06:39 Tools
Ya-Toyoor 06:46 Tools
Regeate-Lek 11:07 Tools
Lil Akabi Asbabouh Pt. 9 06:39 Tools
Allayl 06:01 Tools
Farrak Ma Baina 06:01 Tools
Yam El Amar El Bab 06:01 Tools
Layali el onsi 06:01 Tools
Ana-Ely-Astahel 06:39 Tools
Egypte 06:29 Tools
Dkhlt mrh fy jnynh 06:29 Tools
Baheb Min Gher Amal 06:29 Tools
Ansak Wa Afterak 06:29 Tools
Foug Ma Baina Zaman 06:01 Tools
Farrak Ma Benna Leeh Zzamène 11:05 Tools
العيون 06:01 Tools
Allayl 06:01 Tools
Ya Layali elBochr 06:01 Tools
Echak Ya Bolbol 06:01 Tools
عليك صلاة الله 06:01 Tools
Kifaya Achoufak Men Beid 06:20 Tools
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Amal al-Atrash (Arabic: آمال الأطرش‎‎ Āmāl al-Aṭrash; 25 November 1912 – 14 July 1944), better known by her stage name Asmahan (أسمهان Asmahān), was an Egyptian singer and actress of Syrian origins who lived in Egypt. Having immigrated to Egypt at the age of three years old, her family knew the composer Dawood Hosni, and she sang the compositions of Mohamed El Qasabgi and Zakariyya Ahmad. She also sang the compositions of Mohammed Abdel Wahab and her brother Farid al-Atrash, a then rising star musician in his own right. Her voice was one of the few female voices in Arab music world to pose serious competition to that of Umm Kulthum, who is considered to be one of the Arab world's most distinguished singers of the 20th century. Her mysterious death in an automobile accident shocked the public. Journalists spread gossip about her turbulent personal life and an alleged espionage role in World War II. Asmahan was born to Fahd al-Atrash, a Syrian Druze from Suwayda, and 'Alia al-Mundhir, a Lebanese Druze from Hasbaya. Her father came from the Druze al-Atrash clan, well known in Syria for its role in fighting against the French occupation. Asmahan's father supposedly served as governor of the district of Demirci in Turkey, during the last days of the Ottoman Empire. Asmahan's father, fled the country with his children and pregnant wife. On 25 November 1917, they embarked on a ship from İzmir to Beirut, and Asmahan was born on board. She was named "Amal", meaning "hopes". She was also called "Emily", but always preferred the name "Amal". After the French came into power, the family returned to Jabal al-druze. Following the Adham Khanjar incident in 1916, the al-Atrash home in al-Qrayya (a town in Jabal al-Druze) was bombed by French forces. 'Alia fled with her children to Damascus and, despite orders from Fahd, refused to return. Asmahan later recalled her childhood years in Jabal al-Druze as "untouched by anything truly bad". 'Alia and the three children travelled to Beirut, but, after discovering that the French were searching for them there, they stopped in Haifa in Palestine, and travelled from there to Egypt, where she sought Political Asylum for her and her three children; they were later granted the right of Political Asylum in 1926 by the Egyptian Govenrment; thus neutralized as Egyptian citizens. 'Alia chose to immigrate to Cairo, because 'Alia knew that Egypt's then nationalist prime minister Saad Zaghloul and her husband's relative, Sultan al-Atrash were on corresponding terms. According to family accounts, 'Alia was permitted to enter Egypt under the sponsorship of Saad Zaghloul. Many other Syrians and Lebanese were present in Egypt in this period. Asmahan and her family first lived in an apartment in a humble section of Cairo. Her mother did laundry and sewing to support the family. She had an excellent voice, could play the `ud, sang at parties and made some recordings. Asmahan and her brothers attended a French Catholic school. In order to receive waivers for the high cost of tuition, 'Alia registered them under the alias Kusah (meaning "courgette") rather than trying to convince school officials that members of the wealthy[citation needed] al-Atrash family were destitute. 'Alia received a monthly stipend from a secret benefactor rumored to be "Baron" Crane (of the King–Crane Commission) according to one Egyptian journalist. This allowed her to cover the costs of her children's school's tuition, and a nicer apartment on Habib Shalabi Street. Amal's vocal talent was discovered at an early age. Once, when her brother Farid received one of Egypt's most famous composers, Dawood Hosni, in their home, the latter overheard her singing in her room, and insisted on seeing her immediately. He then asked her to sing again. He was much impressed by the performance, and suggested the stage name of Asmahan to her. Amal began using that name. Asmahan rose to fame quickly: she was not even fourteen (or seventeen, since her birth date is disputed) years old when she was introduced to the public at a concert at the prestigious Cairo Opera House. She sang and recorded songs composed by Farid Ghosn, Dawood Hosni, Mohamed El Qasabgi, and Zakariyya Ahmad. At sixteen, Asmahan was invited by an Egyptian record company to make her first album, featuring her first song "Ya Nar Fouadi" by Farid Ghosn. A variety of teachers advanced her vocal and musical studies. Hosni volunteered to instruct Asmahan on how to play the oud; Qasabgi comments however on the mature level of her sight reading and musicality by the time she performed his work, some years later. However, her brothers wanted her to marry and return to Syria. Her cousin, Hassan al-Atrash travelled to Egypt, intending to propose to a different relative, however, once he saw Asmahan, he pursued her and she returned to Syria for at least five and half years, interrupting her musical career. Since Asmahan sang in Egypt, the lyrics of her songs were written in classical Arabic and in a more colloquial Arabic, but she also sang in the Eastern dialect of Arabic. Asmahan was particularly fond of performing songs by Umm Kulthoum and Mohamed Abdel Wahab. When asked to sing about cultural patriotism and love, she sang of Egypt." Since singers and studios depended on the elites, Asmahan had to sing songs on uplifting nationalist themes or in praise of the Egyptian royal family. At the beginning of her career she sang in the nightclub owned by Mary Mansour. Asmahan's older brother, Fuad, and other Druze relatives considered a career in entertainment for a girl to be disgraceful. For them, culturally, "Egypt was a planetary distance from the small villages of the Druze." and it was difficult for her relatives to accept Asmahan's integration into the heterogeneous Egyptian social scene. The clearly defined divisions, along religious lines, of the Syrian countryside did not operate in Egypt. During the period when she was married to her cousin, Hassan, and then later in 1941, when she remarried him and returned to Egypt her musical career came to a standstill. When the marriage first broke up, she left for Egypt immediately, even before she had obtained the bill of divorce. With her return to Egypt and a singing career, she finally repudiated "respectability", leaving both her relatives and Syrian Druze society furious. When her first film, Intisar al-Shabab, was released in Syria, one young Druze shot at the screen when the character played by Asmahan appeared. Asmahan, bi-national or, in contemporary parlance, trans-national by then, had become "a sophisticated foreigner to the young men in the Jabal Druze." In 1933 Asmahan's cousin, Hassan al-Atrash, came to Cairo and proposed marriage, requesting that Asmahan abandon her musical career.[26] She agreed on three conditions: that they live in Damascus rather than Jabal al-Druze, winter in Cairo, and that she would never be required to wear the traditional hijab.[27][28] They married and moved first to 'Ara where the al-Atrash retain a large home, and then built their own home in Suwayda. Asmahan gave birth to her daughter, Kamellia. Eventually, Asmahan missed her career and her life in Cairo;[29] and in 1939, she and Hassan were divorced. In her final confrontation with her cousin at Mena House Hotel in Giza, she told him, "I stood with you for independence and liberation, I did. But, I was created for another purpose. I prefer the work of Farid, and the work of Umm Kulthum, and of art." She returned to Cairo and resumed her singing career, entering a short marriage to Egyptian director Ahmed Badrkhan. In 1941 she returned to Syria in a dramatic and secret journey under the auspices of the British. Hassan agreed to meet with her, and used the occasion to successfully entreat her to remarry him. During the time they were married, she twice attempted suicide. Tabloid newspapers suggested that this was so that she could obtain a second divorce from Hassan; however it seemed he actually agreed due to her visits to Jerusalem where wild rumours attached to her behaviour and overspending. Her third and final marriage was to the Egyptian director Ahmed Salem, supposedly to facilitate her return to Egypt over impositions by government authorities. It is unclear how that would occur, however, and she had an ongoing studio contract in Egypt. Asmahan was close friends with the al Othman family and met with them when she travelled to Haifa, Palestine, when they helped her. Also in 1941, Asmahan met Mohammed Abdel Wahab, Egypt's most distinguished singer and composer, and starred with him in his operetta Magnun Layla ("Besotted with Layla"). Abdel Wahab introduced her to the journalist, Mohamed al-Taba'i, who suggests that she was in love with him, but the tone of his writing indicates that he was in love with her, but did not respect her. He suggests she had affairs or at least an ongoing relationship with the royal chamberlain Ahmed Pasha Hassanein but this might be exaggerated. Her brothers, Fuad and Farid, were no longer able to monitor her movements. Her brother was a noted gambler; she and her friends also partied, smoked, drank and gambled. She became very ill for a period, but recordings show that her voice did not suffer. Asmahan was proud of her family background, and always mentioned her father and his cousin, Sultan al-Atrash, to clarify her ancestry — once saying to al-Taba'i, after he had just insulted her, "Don't you know who I am? Why I am the daughter of Fahd al-Atrash and cousin to the Amir al-Atrash and the Druze revolutionary hero Sultan al-Atrash. Asmahan was not a first cousin of Hassan's, but referred to him as "ibn 'ammi" to the Egyptians, in fact, she was his second cousin, twice removed (by generation). Asmahan's noted wide vocal range included contralto and dramatic mezzo-soprano (as one can hear in her rendition of "Ya Tuyur" where she reaches a high A with ease and brio). Asmahan's voice has been compared to Fairuz and Sabah. However, as she began her career more than two decades earlier, she had not in fact, adopted the Italian singing technique known as bel canto, but rather learned singing from many admirable models of her own period and in Egypt where a much more diverse group of singers performed, and at a time when Arabic singing utilized both nasal and chest resonance. Asmahan's voice was powerful, but also agile. She generally sang in her chest register but could use her head register and sing in a very controlled tone. It is not incorrect to say that she was the first or one of the first Arabic singers to use the classical western technique, also very few performers are able to alternate two different styles of interpretation and technique in one song (western and tarab). In 1941, during World War II, Asmahan returned to the French Mandate of Syria (Syria, then under the rule of Vichy France) at the request of the British and the Free French. She was on a secret mission to notify her people in Jabal al-Druze that the British and Free French forces would be invading Syria through their territory, and to convince them they should not fight. The British and Free French had promised the independence of Syria and Lebanon to all inhabitants on the date of the invasion. The Druze agreed, even though some groups did not receive word in time and fought the invading forces. After the Allies secured Syria during the Syria-Lebanon Campaign, General Charles de Gaulle visited Syria. When the Allies failed to carry out their promise for Syrian independence, Asmahan tried to contact the Nazis in Turkey, but was stopped at the border and sent to Lebanon. It was also possible that Asmahan needed money because her husband had cut off her expenses, so she may have tried to reach the Germans simply to obtain funds. Asmahan told Mohamed al-Taba'i that she was to receive the sum of £40,000 from the British for her services to the allies. General Charles de Gaulle's representative in Cairo was General Georges Catroux. Catroux's délégué in Damascus, Colonel Collet, stated that the British gave money to Asmahan (and to other Druze men, in his presence) and sent her to the Jabal to secure the support of the Druze before the Allies' invasion.[38] The same information is stated by Edward Spears in his memoirs. On 14 July 1944, a car carrying Asmahan and a female friend crashed and went into a canal at the side of the road, after the driver lost control near the city of Mansoura, Egypt. The car was a two-door model and the women were sitting in the backseat. They were presumed to be rendered unconscious and subsequently drowned. The driver, however, managed to escape. These circumstances gave rise to many suspicions, rumours and conspiracy theories. British intelligence, for example, after many reports circulated claiming she had been working for them, was accused of having got rid of her after she had attempted to meet with German agents. The German Gestapo was also accused of murdering her for the help she had given the British. Her husband at the time had fought violently with her, and her family's honour had been besmirched by the many rumours. Asmahan was buried in Egypt in accordance with her wishes as, years later, were her two brothers, Fouad and Farid al-Atrash, in the Fustat plain in Cairo, which she and brother Farid, along with Egyptian crooner Abdel Halim Hafez, had restored to some of its former glory. The Egyptian Media Production City and a private investor jointly produced a television series depicting the life (and death) of Asmahan. The Arabic series debuted during the month of Ramadan in 2008. Asmahan was played by Syrian actress Sulaf Fawakherji. On 25 November 2015, Google celebrated Asmahan's 103rd birthday using a Google doodle. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.