Displaying 501 - 510 of 1013.
Controversial views from Copts concerning civil marriage as a way to avoid problems in obtaining divorce and remarriage licenses from the Church.
Former actresses and singers wearing the hijāb clarify their stance concerning presenting religious shows on satellite channels.
The author of the article presents the views of the media on the religious satellite channels hosting actresses preaching Islam.
Sudanese Islamic leader Dr. Hasan al- Turābi has recently made known some of his views on a number of controversial Muslim issues, including the hijāb, marriage between a Muslim woman and a kitābī [Reviewer: belonging to the book, a Christian or a Jew], women leading prayers and the testimony of...
The Mufti of Egypt allowed veiled Muslim women who live in Western countries to remove their veil, if they found that it exposed them to danger or threatened their lives. This was as a result of the present circumstances Muslims are confronting in such countries as a reaction to the attacks in...
The situation of Muslims today is like that of the Jews yesterday. They are divided among themselves and killing each other. They are the fugitives of this age. The flames of the fire that the Muslims are exposed to is a punishment for a group that was supposed to be the elite of the world because...
The attacks of September 11 brought forth feelings of rage against everything that has to do with Islam. Wearing a veil is considered to be an explicit sign of Islam and its political attitude. The West has attacked the veil considering it a sign of Islam and its attitudes. The West’s attack on the...
Pastors of the Evangelical church and the Hanging Church in Egypt elaborate on the issue of ordaining women priests and elders.
Pope Shenouda’s rejection of the Administrative Judiciary Court’s ruling granting divorced Christians the right to a second marriage is still drawing wide-scale reactions as many Coptic writers support the pope’s decision on the grounds that the ruling clashes with biblical texts.
After the recent case of a Muslim man, who attempted to convert to Christianity in Afghanistan, the author argues that Germany has a responsibility to stand up for Afghan’s human rights.

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