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Shenouda Marqus remembers his school days, the separation of Muslims and Christians for religion lessons and the Christian class being held under the staircase.
Dr. Nasr Abu Zayd, a celebrated modern scholar of Qur’ānic studies, who fled to the Netherlands after the Egyptian courts ordered that he be forcibly divorced from his wife on charges of apostasy, argues for reform of religious thought and an end to corruption.
Discussions have been taking place between the Muslim Brotherhood and Coptic groups. Some issues have been controversial, like finance and support for the Brotherhood from abroad, but there has been a proposal that the Brotherhood and Copts make a unified list for the local elections.
There are a variety of often contradictory fatwas being issued on television, but the author argues that such disagreement is normal and should not worry Muslims, given that the imāms of the four schools of Islam frequently disagreed over the details of religious matters.
The author argues that globalization has opened Egypt’s borders to international interference in her domestic affairs.
The parents of two Christian girls, Maryān and Christine, who disappeared two years ago after converting to Islam, lodged a report to the police accusing Muhammad Ahmad Ibrāhīm and Tawfīq Muhammad Tawfīq kidnapping their daughters.
Dr. Muhammad Ibrāhīm Mansour criticizes the Muslim Brotherhood for not offering a comprehensive platform on political reform. Given the fact it represents the major opposition force in Egypt, Mansour argues that Muslim Brotherhood’s unprecedented success in the recent parliamentary election will...
Sulaymān Shafīq says that the turnout for the recent presidential and parliamentary elections has revealed that nearly 80 percent of Egyptians are "out of service.”
The Muslim Brotherhood’s unprecedented success in the recent parliamentary elections has raised fears over the future of the political process in Egypt. Kamāl Zākhir Mousa argues that Egypt’s major opposition group does not have a clear agenda for a civil state, in which all citizens enjoy the same...
Muhammad Salmāwī argues that Egypt is at a crossroads between an Islamic religious state and a civil state governed by the ruling party which has lost credibility in the Egyptian street.

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