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The article reads that only a few days after an article was published by the Washington Post criticizing Saudi curricula, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) held a symposium on the issue of the relationship between Islamic textbooks in Saudi Arabia and the war on terror.
During their meeting yesterday, Pope Benedict XVI and British Prime Minister Tony Blair agreed on the need for interfaith and intercultural dialogue to combat terrorism, underscoring the contribution that common values among religions can make to dialogue, particularly with Islam.
A recent opinion poll conducted by the Dutch News Agency (ANP) has showed that half of all Dutch people hate Muslims, that 10% of them believe that they are more intelligent than immigrants and that “racial discrimination showed be allowed against immigrants.”
The author argues that the Muslim Brotherhood supreme guide’s disrespect for national affiliation is shared by all Muslim fundamentalists who believe that their nationality is Islam.
A symposium entitled, ‘How can I live as a Copt?’ held in Shubra, discussed the role of Copts and the importance of their effective contribution to society.
Al-Muslimoun Fī al-Gharb: Bayn Tanāqudāt al -Wāqi‘ wa Tahadīyāt al-Mustaqbal [Muslims in the West: Contradictions of reality and challenges of the future] is a book by Moroccan writer al-Tajani Boul cAwali, who argues that the lives of Muslims in the West are full of contradictions.
The author of the article reviews a book by Karīma Kamāl, a journalist known for her articles discussing the problematic issue of divorce among Copts.
Ibrāhīm Qa‘oud argues that the Nazi Holocaust is just an illusion or propaganda to cover up the real Holocaust committed against Palestinians in the occupied territories.
The article focuses on the referral of Sawt al-Umma journalists to the criminal court over accusations that they slandered judges by publishing a so-called black list of judges involved in rigging the last parliamentary elections.
Well-known Egyptian feminist writer, Dr. Nawāl al-Sa‘dāwī and her daughter, Muna Hilmi, otherwise known as Muna Nawal Hilmī, have sparked heated controversy over their recent statements, in which they argued that a child should take his/her mother’s name, thus contradicting Islamic shari‘a...

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