Displaying 111 - 120 of 656.
Sociologists and psychiatrists in Egypt have claimed that the incident in al-Amīrīyah which left a Muslim man dead was a tribal crime and not a sectarian one.
The Abū Fānā ordeal is still stealing the limelight in the press. Some newspapers try to provide plans and documents related to the issue. From his residence in the United States, Pope Shenouda III called for postponing the negotiations until all culprits in the attacks against the monks are...
The article sheds light on the growing demands of Egypt’s Jews to retain ownership of their claimed past properties. They cite the Genizah as evidence to justify their rights. Dr. Ramzī has his own point of view though.
The article sheds light on the way churches and mosques deal with money collected from votive offerings. Specialists on both sides were interviewed. While legal percentages govern mosques’ money, the church’s shares are monitored only by the pope.
The article discusses Statute 38 and the proposal to include and amendment to deal with Coptic divorcees.
The article discusses civil marriage, and the need to provide a legal framework for divorce.
Muhammad Nūr reviews the decision to enforce the latest amendments of the Copts’ Personal Status Law, known as Statute 38.
‘Īd Labīb states that the celebration for Pope Shenouda’s return from the U.S will only last 17 minutes and denies the rumor that Wafā’ Qustantīn is dead.
Different factions are emerging in the Muslim Brotherhood's guidance office and candidates who did not manage to get a seat in the recent elections have called for the general guide to be removed from office.
In the aftermath of the attacks against the Abū Fānā Monastery, the governor of Minya headed a committee that drafted decisions that do not appear favorable for the church. From his residency in Cleveland in the U.S., Pope Shenouda III declared the relations between the bishopric in Mallawī and the...

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