Displaying 131 - 140 of 430.
The administrative judiciary’s refusal to file the lawsuit establishing the “Al-Safawīyya Al-Naqshabandīyya,” a Shī‘i organization, provoked controversy. This article links Shī‘i activities in Egypt to Iranian political influences. Religion and politics are never far apart.
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.
Lawyer of Islamic groups, Muntasir al-Zayyāt, who defends Hasan Mustafa Usāma Nasr, otherwise known as Abu ‘Umar al-Misrī, has recently revealed that al-Misrī is planning to sue the former Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, for being involved in his abduction and deportation to Egypt...
The author, Abdullah Bin Bayyuh, discusses the main points concerning the life of Muslims in non-Muslim countries, in light of his participation in a conference held in London about this issue.
The author reports insults directed to the Azhar in the Islamic Centre in London and a similar incident in Malaysia.
Ibrāhīm Qa‘oud argues that the Nazi Holocaust is just an illusion or propaganda to cover up the real Holocaust committed against Palestinians in the occupied territories.
The author investigates in this series of articles the early beginnings of the Salafist ideology that depends on jihād as its principal activity and discusses the reverberations of this movement in several countries.
Five Scandinavian tourists, including three Norwegians and two Swedes [Reviewer: No names mentioned] have been accused of blasphemy on their holiday in Egypt for circumambulating a statue of a mermaid located in a town square in Hurghada, in an attempt to parody Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca....
The author deals with the issue of Islamic outfits for Muslim sportswomen and the high demand for such sportswear that helps women practicing the sports they like while observing the teachings of their faith.
After the London tube and bus bombings of July 7, 2005 killed her 24-year-old daughter Jennifer, Rev. Julie Nicholson has resigned from the Parish Church of St Aidan’s Bristol, because she felt it too difficult to lead people in words of peace and reconciliation, when she was unable to forgive the...

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