How to pronounce Roza | Run + flOw + Zero + mAn Each block is a syllable. Thick black border indicates stress/emphasis. Other pronunciations are acceptable. |
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Original Spelling | ڕۆزا How to write Roza in the original language, such as Arabic or Persian |
This is NOT a Quranic name, but Muslims can use it since it has a good or neutral meaning.
Meaning of Roza
Roza is a Kurdish name for girls that means “radiant”, “beautiful”. It is a variant of the Kurdish name Rozha and the Persian name Rouza, both of which have the same meaning and linguistic origins.
Reader Comments:
on Tuesday 31st of December 2019 01:25:42 AM
In Persian روزه (Roza) means “fast, fasting” . It’s another term for Saum
on Saturday 1st of July 2023 04:01:14 PM
Hi Roza is 100percent Jewish name , it’s a Yiddish name it’s a common name in my sect, my great grandmothers name was Roza and she was a holocaust survivor, and many more people in my family have this name and common in my community, I think it’s best too not steal peoples identity because you will lose your own in the process, in Judaism we have a lot of names who we can distinguish from what sect we come from aswell, this name is dominant in my sect let alone all Jews , it’s a jewish name we have been using this name for longer than u ever heard about it before , it’s a new name to you, but it’s not too us , it has been in our family’s as Jews for longer than u ever knew it even existed,
on Saturday 1st of July 2023 04:04:43 PM
My family came from Poland and we are Jewish it’s a Jewish name , I know more than 10 people that are Jewish with this name, it’s not a name of the nations, all our names that the Muslim people are taking and Claiming to be there’s is silly because it’s like a Jewish person waking around and introducing himself as Mohammed lol, that’s exactly what it’s like
on Saturday 1st of July 2023 04:07:58 PM
Roza Robota, underground activist in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.Institution: Yad Vashem, Jerusalem
In Brief
Roza Robota was born in Ciechanow, Poland, where she was active in the Ha-shomer ha-Za’ir youth movement before joining the movement’s underground in the ghetto. In 1942 she was deported with her family to Auschwitz but was transferred to Birkenau soon after. She organized a rebel group and was part of the revolt of the Sonderkommando in 1944. She was arrested alone with other women prisoners involved in the explosion and was continuously tortured and interrogated. She was hanged in the presence of other prisoners, singing “Hatikvah” in her final moments. Her heroism is remembered as on of the most courageous acts of Jewish women prisoners during the Holocaust.