Displaying 21 - 30 of 60.
Freedom of press is one the basic human rights in Europe, but at the same time it has to be used wisely in order not to provoke the sensitivity of other, says Tāriq Ramadān.
The article is about the ready-made accusation of anti-Semitism and how it aims at creating an atmosphere of fear that brings Israel above accountability. The author mentions examples of well-known personalities who were accused of anti-Semitism and how this accusation affected their future...
The article is a translation of an article published in the New York Times about Tareq Ramadan, the grandson of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood Hassan Al-Banna. Ramadan is regarded by a large number of people interested in Islamic affairs as a respectable researcher who calls for a moderate,...
The article is an overview of a book by the religious affairs editor of “Le Monde” that was published recently under the title “La France des mosquées” [The France of Mosques]. The writer of the book is famous for his open-mindedness towards Islam. He is very keen on understanding the Islamic...
The article is an overview of foreign press reports about the accusation that Tareq Ramadan, grand child of Hassan Al-Banna, has a connection with Bin Laden´s network.
The grandson of Hassan Al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood group, delivered a lecture at the Institut du Monde Arabe [The Institute of the Arab World]. He attacked fundamentalism and asked young Muslims not to melt away and lose their culture and at the same time not to isolate...
The article discusses the conditions of the Muslim community and France, its relations with the secular French society and its political influence.
A recently published Egyptian State Information Service report examines attitudes towards and problems faced by Muslims and Arabs in the UK, Germany and other western countries.
A recent poll in Britain has shown that over two thirds of the Muslim students in the country believe that British foreign is to blame for the July terrorist attacks.
The British government has chosen Tāriq Ramadān, Muslim intellectual and grandson of the Muslim Brotherhood’s founder, to work as an anti-fundamentalist-extremism advisor.

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