thumb|Abdullah Mansour of Kfar Kasem shakes hands with the veteran Shomer Avraham Shapira at the traditional "Sulha" gathering in Kfar Kasem following the Kafr Qasim massacre|massacre that took place there. Sulh () is an Arabic word meaning 'resolution' or 'fixing' generally, in problem solving. It is frequently used in the context of social problems. It is also an Arabic surname, mostly from Lebanon used in the variant Solh. in other words, it means dispute resolution among individuals or people with misunderstanding.
thumb|Abdullah Mansour of Kfar Kasem shakes hands with the veteran Shomer Avraham Shapira at the traditional "Sulha" gathering in Kfar Kasem following the Kafr Qasim massacre|massacre that took place there. Sulh () is an Arabic word meaning 'resolution' or 'fixing' generally, in problem solving. It is frequently used in the context of social problems. It is also an Arabic surname, mostly from Lebanon used in the variant Solh. in other words, it means dispute resolution among individuals or people with misunderstanding.
==Usage== In Quranic Arabic, ṣulḥ is used as a term signifying an agreement or settlement over a property dispute and retains this sense in later Islamic legal usage. In Bedouin customary law, it can signify a settlement of a tribal feud and in modern Arabic usage, it is applied to treaties, such as ṣulḥ Versailles (the Treaty of Versailles). In general, it reflects a sense of resolution of conflict through negotiation. The two parties select respected individuals to mediate the conflict, a truce (hudna) is declared, a settlement is reached that maintains the honor and status of both parties, and a public ritual takes place. Particularly important is the fact that the practice affirms bonds between groups and not just individuals. It averts a cycle of revenge.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).