Displaying 1221 - 1230 of 1441.
The author presents the assassination of two key Egyptian politicians of the 20th century and the role that the Muslim Brotherhood played in an attempt to expose how the banned group has been following terrorist thoughts.
The Azhar has recommended that a book on the sexual life of the Prophet Muhammad be confiscated.
Muhammad Hijāzī, the controversial convert to Christianity speaks for the first time to the Egyptian press. He announces the birth of his daughter and asserts that he will continue to fight to achieve official recognition of his conversion.
An alleged phone call betweens the general guide of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo and the chairman of the political bureau of Hamās in Damascus stresses the need to put pressure on Egypt by organizing demonstrations to gain international approval to stop the siege of the Gaza Strip.
The article discusses two Iranian women who are breaking the mould in the conservative Islamic society in the country.
Shaykh Muhammad Sayyid Tantāwī, the grand imām of the Azhar, works hard to gain the regime’s appreciation and incurs many Azhar scholars and shaykh’s enmity because of his stances toward different issues.
The Administrative Judicial Court has rejected 105 out of the 400 lawsuits presented by converts who want to officially re-embrace Christianity.
Hānī Labīb suggests a number of measures by which a convert from one religion to another could be accepted in society.
‘Isām al-‘Iryān: the Muslim Brotherhood believe in the Constitution although they have certain reservations and consider themselves an innovative religious trend.
The author shows three conversations he had during his short visit to Egypt, by which he believes that there is a hope for better future for Egyptians.

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