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The continuing repercussions in the wake of the Abu Fana incidents are analysed in this article. In particular the article comments that local clerics and monks have taken part in a sit-in at the monastery to highlight their protest of the injustices that are occurring against them.
Expatriate Coptic associations plan to demonstrate on October 6 in front of the UN headquarters in New York.
The article reports on Dr. George Habīb Bibāwī’s response to an article that Rose al-Yūsuf published on his book, ’Qudsīyat al-Zawāj fī al-Kanīsah al-Injīlīyah’ [Sanctity of Marriage in the Evangelical Church].
Rose al-Yūsuf responds to claims made in al-Katībah al-Tībīah newspaper that it was trying to create sectarian sedition when it published a summary of Dr. Nazmī Lūqā’s book.
The article raises a number of questions about the Coptic Conference that was held in Cairo recently, such as why Egyptian experts in Coptic history were not invited to the conference.
Yūsuf al-Badrī has stated that Jamāl al-Bannā is corrupt and that the media should not cover his ideas.
When a Christian woman went to renew her I.D card she discovered that her religion had been entered as ’Muslim’ on her papers.
The author discusses the impact of the U.S. invasion of Iraq on “Islamic thought,” noting that the September 11 attacks generated anger on a global scale, but this anger was overshadowed by the successive invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.
The article discusses the September 11 attacks and points to the ongoing investigations into it, in an attempt to prove or disprove aspects of the accepted account of events.
Dr. Abū al-Najā says that she was able to identify the main point of disagreement over the offensive drawings of the Prophet Muhammad, during her visit to Denmark. At the Egyptian-Danish dialogue, she heard two views: apologies for humiliating any religion and a protection of freedom of expression.

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