Displaying 1601 - 1610 of 2707.
The author harshly criticizes an editorial in the al -Mukhtār al-Islāmī magazine that relentlessly attacked the journalist, Sa‘īd Shu‘ayb, who conducted a controversial interview with Muhammad Mahdī ‘Ākif, the Murshid of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood group, and Rose al- Yousuf newspaper for...
Terrorism, extremism, sectarian sedition and the rise of the Baha’ī religion are all the consequences of the diminishing role of religious institutions and political, economic and social factors.
The author presents a meeting between Ahmad ‘Abd al- Mu‘ti Hijāzī a famous Egyptian poet and the muftī in which Hijāzī talked about the relationship between scholars, extremism and terrorism. The muftī boasted that all those who proved to be extremists or terrorists were not graduates of...
The author discussed the use of DNA to determine paternity, and Islam’s view on this matter.
Scholars from the Azhar rejected the opinion of the muftī that terrorists should be physically liquidated and called for confronting the problem of terrorism through an enlightened Muslim way of thinking.
A conference was convened recently to discuss ways to stand up to terrorism through the propagation of moderate ideologies in the face of extremism.
The article discusses the weekly Friday sermon and the poor performance of the preachers, whom many view as insufficient to stand on the minbar [a pulpit inside the mosque] and deliver sermons to Muslim worshippers.
The author investigates the rampant ultra- religious current and the niqāb phenomenon inside the Fine Arts College in Egypt, starting his 11- page news feature with a photo depicting several female students wearing the niqāb inside the college with a caption reading "this is a photo of...
The author says that Muslims should leave Islam to defend itself, and stop bringing religion into conflicts, such as the Iraq or Palestine conflicts, which should be dealt with as causes of people under oppression struggling for their rights, away from religion.
Al-Musawwar had an interview with the vice-president of the Egyptian National Council for Human Rights, Kamāl Abu al-Majd, where he discussed religious, legal, political and security problems in Egypt.

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