Displaying 361 - 370 of 1129.
The author reviews the opinion of a committee of the Azhar to ban the publicizing of adultery-related cases amidst outcry from media professors who assert that such a ban has not prevented adultery in other countries.
A conference commemorating the first anniversary of the July 7 London bombings is to be held on June 25 in Birmingham, under the auspices of a number of Islamic organizations, including al-Ghurabā’ [The strangers] Movement.
The author focuses in his column on statements by the Brotherhood chief in which he stated that tourists could drink liquor, provided that they did so inside hotels or their homes, and not in public.
A famous scriptwriter criticizes Islamic fanaticism and “repentant actresses” resuming their artistic careers.
Muhammad Rabī‘a discusses the growing phenomenon of ‘militias’ of men and women accusing people of unbelief and criticizing their dress on the public transport system.
The author tackles the recent myths and juggleries in Islamic discourse which deform the Islamic image before the world, urging the Azhar to deal with this serious problem.
The European Union is now developing a new strategy to review the language it uses to describe terrorists who claim to act in the name of Islam.
Nādya Mutāwic says that three five-star hotels in the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh and four others in Cairo have prevented allowing veiled women entry, on the grounds that tourists feel less comfortable in their presence.
The author says that Islam is nothing but faith and sharī‘a [Islamic law], and therefore criticizes those preachers who preach about ‘unseen things’, which is, frankly speaking, not proved by prophetic traditions and stories.
The book "Christian poets in the Arabian peninsula", written by Najīb Wahba, mainly discusses the origin of Arabs and the Arabic language and the nature of poetry in the pre-Islamic era, proving that the Arabic language is not only for Muslims as some people claim, but is also a language for...

Pages

Subscribe to