Displaying 161 - 170 of 724.
Mahdī Bunduq presents a historical background of Muslim-Christian relations since the Islamic invasion of Egypt in 641 A.D. until the establishment of modern state in the 19th century.
The author presents three books that he praises as subjective and well informed on the Coptic role in political and social life in Egypt.
Ahmad Murād reports on the statements of the prominent Muslim scholar Dr. Shaykh Yūsuf al-Qaradāwī, in which he called on Muslims to renew their fiqh in order to abide by global changes to avoid clashes with world cultures.
In a surprise decision the Supreme Military Court has dropped charges of terrorism and money-laundering against 40 key leaders of the illegal Muslim Brotherhood, while it maintained the charge of joining a group that has been founded illegally.
The Egyptian press analyzes the various repercussions of the declared introspections of the Jihād Group. Political observers and specialists in political Islam differ in their evaluation of these introspections.
The author criticized his fellow Coptic author Midḥat Bishāy for his persistent criticism against the church, Coptic expatriates and other issues.
al-Ḥayāh conducted an interview with Sayyid Imām who spoke about his life. The following lines also present reactions to the revisions and comments of observers and Islamic groups leaders.
The following lines present more details about the Jihād introspections, their advocates and their opponents. While some people consider Imām’s revisions a turning point in the history of the Islamic groups, many observers doubt the authenticity of the revisions.
The article reviews a book of a British thinker Robert Irwin entitled, ‘For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and their Enemies,’ which responds to the theory of late prominent thinker Edward Sa‘īd on orientalism.
The Egyptian press publishes extracts from Imām’s book of revisions. The book was recently published to announce al-Jihād Islamic organization’s initiative to quell violence and lead interventions.

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