Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

ޤައުމީ ސަލާމް The national anthem of the Maldives Karaoke

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
2,700
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Aug 15, 2010

ޤައުމީ މިއެކުވެރިކަން މަތީ ތިބެގެން ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ޤައުމީ ބަހުން ގިނަހެޔޮ ދުޢާ ކުރަމުން ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ޤައުމީ ނިޝާނަށް ޙުރުމިތާއެކު ބޯލަންބައި ތިބެގެން
އައުދާނަކަން ލިބިގެން އެވާދިދައަށް ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ނަސްރާ ނަސީބާ ކާމިޔާބުގެ ރަމްޒަކަށް ހިމެނޭ
ފެއްސާ ރަތާއި ހުދާ އެކީފެނުމުން ކުރީމެސަލާމް
ފަޚްރާ ޝަރަފް ގައުމަށް އެހޯދައިދެއްވި ބަތަލުނަށް
ޒިކްރާގެ މަތިވެރި ޅެންތަކުން އަޑުގައި ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ދިވެހީންގެނަން މޮޅުވުން އެދިތިބެ ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
މިނިވަންކަމާ މަދަނިއްޔަތާ ލިބިގެން މިޢާލަމުގާ
ދިނިގެން ހިތާމަތަކުން ތިބުންއެދިގެން ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ދީނާއި ވެރިންނަށް ހެޔޮހިތުން ހުރުމަތް އަދާކުރަމުން
ސީދާ ވަފާތެރިކަންމަތީ ތިބެގެން ކުރީމެ ސަލާމް
ދައުލަތުގެ އަބުރާ ޢިއްޒަތާ މަތިވެރި އަބަދަށް
އައުދާނަވުން އެދި ހެޔޮދުޢާ ކުރަމުން ކުރީމެ ސަލާމ
----------------------------------------------
Qaumii Salaam (Dhivehi: ޤައުމީ ސަލާމް, National Salute) is the current national anthem of the Maldives. The lyrics were written by Muhammad Jameel Didi in 1948, and the melody was composed by Sri Lankan maestro Pandit Wannakuwattawaduge Don Amaradeva in 1972.Qaumii Salaam is a proud declaration of national unity, the country's Islamic faith, the victory of historic battles and an homage to the heroes who fell defending the nation. It also wishes further development on the country, while paying respect to the leaders who had served her.Until 1948, a melody without lyrics called the 'Salaamathi' was performed by a royal band on state occasions at the 'Etherekoilu', the residence of the Sultan. Soon after it was decided that the Salaamathi needed lyrics accompanied by a new melody. The lyrics were written by a young poet and later chief justice, Mohamed Jameel Didi.
Jameel Didi wrote the words for the new Salaamathi bearing in mind the influence of Urdu poetry during the time, closely imitating its style and also furnishing his work with words borrowed from Arabic. Afterwards, Jameel Didi began looking for a tune to accompany his poem when he heard the noon chime (Auld Lang Syne) of his uncle's clock. The tune was adopted to the lyrics and the new Salaamathi was complete.Throughout the 1950s and 1960s Maldivians became more aware of the importance of a National Anthem and in 1972, shortly before the Maldives was visited by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, the government hastily commissioned maestro W.D. Amaradeva for a new melody for the anthem. The original lyrics were retained, with a few changes to emphasize the fact that Maldives has been a republic since 1968. As of 2007, this version of the anthem has survived without any modifications.



qaumi: mi ekuweɾikan mati: tibegen kuɾi:me sala:m,
qaumi: bahun gina hejɔ duˁa: kuɾamun kuɾi:me sala:m.
qaumi: niʃa:naɲ huɾumita:ˀeku bɔ: lambaˀi tibegen
aˀuda: nakan libigen e wa: didaˀak kuɾi:me sala:m.

qaumi: mi ekuweɾikan mati: tibegen kuɾi:me sala:m,
qaumi: bahun gina hejɔ duˁa: kuɾamun kuɾi:me sala:m.

nasɾa: nasi:ba: ka:mija:bu-ge ɾamzakaŋ himene:
fessa: ɾata:i huda: eki: fenumun kuɾi:me sala:m.

qaumi: mi ekuweɾikan mati: tibegen kuɾi:me sala:m,
qaumi: bahun gina hejɔ duˁa: kuɾamun kuɾi:me sala:m.

Category:

People & Blogs

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 2 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (1)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • This recording is broken :(

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more