Sami may refer to:
Plot
Arabani is a slang word that combines Hebrew and Arabic. Yoseph is a Druze who returns to his native village after having been estranged from it for 17 years. He arrives with his son and daughter, whose Jewish mother he has just divorced. Yoseph plans to settle down in this small Druze village. That decision leads to friction within the closed, conservative Druze community and also with his mother Afifa, who accepts him and his children as part of her family. The friction stems from the fact that to be a real Druze, both parents must be Druze. Despite the problems and difficulties, Semadar, Yoseph's daughter, unexpectedly finds love.
Plot
During the war in 1971, Meher falls in love with a soldier from the enemy side. When her love is discovered, she is shamed and silenced by her family and society. Today 38 years after the war, Meher has a visitor she cannot turn down. Sarah-a 'war-child,' Meher's cousin Neela's daughter, who was given away for adoption has come back to piece together her past. Together, these two women must re-tell history through their stories in order to cut through the stigmas and walk into light.
Keywords: loving-the-other, south-asian
Plot
Zahra Hidayatullah and Maliha Sami have been close friends for over seven years. Zahra belongs to a lower middle class family and Maliha comes from an upper class household, yet their class difference has never threatened their unbreakable bond. Maliha has been there for her friend through many hardships, though she never really knew the extent of the mental anguish that plagued Zahra's life. The first blow to their friendship domes when Maliha's older brother Junaid, shows his interest in marrying Zahra. Her parents have no objection to the union, but it comes as a real shock to Maliha. Somehow Maliha is not able to fathom the thought that her best friend could marry her only brother. Daam is the story of the price that she pays to her best friend to stop this marriage and how that price becomes a Daam (trap) for all of them.
Plot
"Mazah fi Jad" (Seriously Joking) features three families - two Muslim and one Christian in the Bethlehem area. Focusing on the problems of everyday life for ordinary Palestinians, particularly the young, the story follows the Abu Ali family, the Um Sami family, the Abu Saleh family, and their friends; as the characters deal with social issues related to love, marriage, high unemployment, nepotism, corruption, and traditions versus modernity in family affairs. The storyline comments on the lives of Palestinian youth with a focus on their needs and ambitions as they experience university and the challenges of living in Palestine.
I've seen her face
I've heard her name
I've lost my place and she's to blame
And I can't stand it
When I'm staring in her eyes
And she's not looking back
It ain't a big surprise
I've heard music,
I've heard noise
I wish that she could hear her voice
The way that I do
When I go to sleep at night
And dream my life away
But she's gone when I awake
Sami, Sami
Why can't you see
What you're doing to me?
The way her hair falls in her eyes
Makes me wonder
If she'll ever see through my disguise
And I'm under her spell
Everything is falling
But I don't know where to land
And she just knows where she is
But she don't know who I am
Sami, Sami
Why can't you see
What you're doing to me?
I see you singing on that stage
You look just like an angel
And all I do is pray
Than maybe someday
You'll hear my song
And understand that all along
There's something more that I'm trying to say
When I say
Sami, Sami
Why can't you see
What you're doing to me?
What you're doing to me
Sami, Sami
Why can't you see
What you're doing to me?
Un día ví a mi amo llorando en el balcón
creo que es el tiempo, el niño creció.
Espero que no se olvide que él fue quien me crió
ya no me acaricia, se avergonzó ue sea...
Sami... Sami... Sami...
¿Quién es el mas lindo en todo el mundo?
Sami... Sami... Sami...
Despierta perro, soy tu garrapata
arranca de casa, no ves como te tratan,
antes eras el regalón del claustro
ahora no eres mas que su estorbo.
Cuando era niño te hacía cariño
ahora que creció solo te dejó,
abandona a ese canalla
en la calle fácil un amo se halla.
(CORO)... ¿Quién es más lindo que él ?
¿Quién es mas fiel que él?, no existe otro así.
-Qué esperas gancho, que esperas para ser libre y correr.
-El volverá, yo sé que vendrá para jugar, para cantar.
-Todavía crees en el perro pascuero.
-Sólo es a él a quien le creo.
-La puerta se abrió
-Déjame esperar
-¡El niño murió!
-¡Esa es tu verdad!
(CORO)... Ese es mi perro
.. Toma tu hueso