Displaying 21 - 30 of 52.
The author discusses religious men and the sensitivity and intolerance that control the relationship between Muslims and Christians, and differentiates between Islam and Muslims and between Christianity and Christians.
A Pakistani Fatwá regards the vaccination against polio as Ḥarām because it was discovered by two American Jewish scientists who, according to the Fatwá, created the vaccination in order to negatively impact the potency of Muslims.
The author criticizes Egyptian scholar Zaghlūl al- Najjār’s opinions that tsunami, as well as any natural disasters, occur as punishment from God to countries that welcome infidel tourists, and permit gambling or the consumption of alcohol.
Khālid Muntasir writes about the assassination of Faraj Fūdah and the accusations directed against him. These accusations include Fūdah’s rejection of the application of Islamic Sharī‘ah, having seen no positive impact of its application in other countries.
The article provides a listing of articles on two controversial Fatwás issued by the Muftī of Egypt and a professor at the Azhar University. The first fatwá says that the prophet’s urine used to be given to his companions for blessings. The second one urges working women to breastfeed their male co...
The article is based on a listing of articles that tackle two controversial fatwás issued by two prominent Islamic scholars. The first Fatwá was issued by Dr. ‘Izzat ‘Atīyah, the head of the Hadīth Department of the Faculty of Usūl al-Dīn [Fundamentals of Religion] at the Azhar University. The...
The Azhar curriculum confirms superstitions, discrimination and narrow- mindedness. The FIqh curriculum goes back five centuries, and represents insulting rules for treating women and Dhimmīs.
Khālid Muntassir writes about ‘Al-Awbah’ [The Return], a book that has caused a wide controversy in Saudi Arabia.
The scientific inimitability of the Qur’ān harms Islam more than it benefits it.
The author in this article criticizes the muftī and the religious institution, refuting the muftī’s defense that it has never been responsible for terrorism, and calls for fatwas taking into account the spirit of modernity.

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