Displaying 961 - 970 of 10154.
In the article, Azhar scholars have confirmed a Fatwá of Shaykh Farahāt al-Munajjī that a Muslim man is prohibited to get married to a Jewish woman.
The article reports on what it called the phenomenon of Coptic members resigning from the Ghad [Tomorrow] Party, believing that one of the reasons behind these repeated resignations was the new tendency by some influential members to Islamize the party.
Bilāl al-Dawwī reports on the legal problems facing the Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Studies, and wonders the problems could lead to the closure of the center.
Charles Fū’ād al-Miṣrī interviewed Kamīl Ḥalīm, president of the Coptic Assembly of America and one of the organizers of the Coptic conference in Chicago, to speak about the main goals of the conference and the future agendas of Coptic organizations in the West.
In the article, Bishop Maximus I, head of Saint Athanasius Church’s Synod, responds to a previous article by the Copt journalist Hānī Labīb, in which he had attacked Maximus.
The South Sinai Orthodox Diocese has accused the local authorities of the Ra’s Sidr city of destroying a tree fence surrounding Mar Girgis Church, on claims that it was unofficially planted on state-owned land.
The author reports on speeches being delivered at an Egyptian-German meeting on the importance of the enforcement of citizenship under the civil state that was held after an invitation from the Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services [CEOSS].
Sharīf ‘Abd Allāh reports on the decision of the North Cairo Primary Court to delay the hearing in the case of compensation for the victims of al-Kushh to January 3, 2008.
Mājid Sam‘ān and Wā’il ‘Alī report on a press conference organized by both Human Rights Watch and the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights [EIPR], in which they announced the release of a new report entitled "Prohibited Identities" about the Egyptian Government’s stance toward religious...
Father Marqus ‘Azīz calls for an apology from Rajab Hilāl Ḥamīdah for his provocative declarations that were interpreted as an invitation to kill Copts.

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