Displaying 331 - 340 of 619.
The recent Copenhagen conference, organized by Muslim preacher, ‘Amr Khālid, has come under severe criticism from many clerics in the Arab and Muslim world. Accusations of receiving foreign funds and breaking the momentum of the Muslim nation’s awakening for the sake of Denmark followed.
The journalists of Āfāq ‘Arabīya have staged a sit-in at the Syndicate of Journalists demanding the republication of the suspended paper and its freedom from the control of the Muslim Brotherhood.
After the Muslim Brotherhood secured 88 seats in the Egyptian parliament, the authorities arrested a number of its members, marking what the author termed as “the end of honeymoon between the cabinet and the group.”
The author gives an account of some of the bombings carried out by the Muslim Brotherhood during the time of founder Hasan al-Bannā, as acknowledged by a member of the group’s secret organization.
The author considers the principles of the Muslim Brotherhood, based on loyalty to belief and not to the country as harmful to communities, and asserts that nationalism should be a the base for a normal and successful society.
Since Muhammad Mahdī ‘Ākif took over as murshid [guide] of Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood in 2004, the group has seemed more politicized than ever. The group has participated, directly or indirectly, in the political actions and dialogue, played its part in the reform process, and expressed...
Due to the importance of the media to the Muslim Brotherhood, the group tends to occupy pre-existing well-known newspapers and magazines to promote its activities, writes Hamdī Rizq.
The conference held in Denmark over the offensive Danish cartoons called for by the young controversial dā‘iya cAmr Khālid has created different reactions in the West and the Islamic world.
The author writes about two incidents which caused the assassin of the former Egyptian prime minister to confess, almost six decades after his crime.
‘Alā’ Matar accuses the Muslim Brotherhood of being ambiguous over news about their internal elections. He believes that such ambiguity hides many conflicts among members of the group.

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