Displaying 91 - 100 of 243.
The family of the disappeared Coptic girl, Amal Zakī Nasīm, has said in an official memorandum that their daughter has been kidnapped under an American-Zionist conspiracy in order to incite sectarian clashes in the country.
Coptic students resort to isolate themselves in “ghettos” in Egyptian universities to avoid the hostility of Muslim students in general and Islamists in particular. The other students refer to the Coptic places of meeting by Jewish names.
Waḥīd Ḥāmid compares the Islamic Justice and Development Party [AKP] in Turkey, which has reached power, and the Muslim Brotherhood group in Egypt. He believes that the Turkish party has managed to attain power by concerning themselves with the real problems of people, unlike Islamists in Egypt...
Dr. Ikrām Lam‘ī, the author, thinks that Egyptian society has been severely hit by religious hypocrisy that takes forms of wearing distinguished religious signs for many purposes other than religion.
The family of Amal Zakī Nasīm, a Christian girl who was reported as leaving her family on August 12, continues in their sit-in at Mār Girgis Church in al-Mahallah al-Kubrá city over the security forces’ failure to find any clue of their daughter’s whereabouts.
A new security drive had targeted key figures of the banned Muslim Brotherhood group within days after announcing the platform of their alleged political party.
A new alleged forced disappearance of an 18-year-old Coptic lady sparks protests in Egypt. The woman’s family and a considerable number of Copts are carrying out sit-ins at the church. The family accuses security forces of carelessness. Rumors spread about her escape to marry a Muslim colleague.
Shaykh Abū Islām ‘Abd Allāh launched al-Ummah satellite channel in response to al-Ḥayāh Christian channel’s continuous offenses against the Prophet Muhammad and Islam. Abū al-Islām declared his intention to launch a new channel exclusively for woman wearing the Niqāb. He called on leading...
The article contains a number of Islamic thinkers’ and scholars’ opinions on the phenomenon of Islamophobia in the West.
Shaykh Yūsuf al-Badrī files communiqu?©s to the General Prosecutor against those who he thinks abuse religion or have different opinions.

Pages

Subscribe to