Displaying 4141 - 4150 of 10154.
The author reviews a book by a Muslim physician/intellectual about some ill concepts by Muslims regarding religion and some practices mistakenly taken as religious orders.
The author gives a brief review of Egypt during the time of the Ikshidid Dynasty, which ruled the country on behalf of the central government of the Abbasid caliphate, which was located in Baghdad.
The author of this article reviews three books written in a way he thinks is objective about Islam, the Prophet Muhammad and Muslims, stressing that not all Western writers are unfair to Islam.
A lot of arguments have been made concerning possible amendments to the Egyptian constitution. Any attempt to modify this constitution must abolish article no. 2, according to ‘Ādil Jundī, which faces much criticism from Copts and others.
Nabīl ‘Abd al-Malik discusses the issue of the rights of minorities in the Middle East, suggesting that current circumstances require foreign support in order to achieve justice for persecuted minorities and ethnic groups in the region.
The author thinks that Dr. Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm is setting a new branch of Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Studies in the U.S. to act as the future main headquarters, a step which would facilitate U.S. financing of the center.
The author reviews the relations binding Egypt and the Vatican, which established diplomatic ties in 1920.
Usāma Salāma argues that discussion of the Coptic file in the International Committee on Human Rights at the UN, may lead to harmful acts against Copts who still live inside Egypt.
The issue of international interference in Egypt on behalf of the Copts is highly controversial, and the author argues that Egyptian distress, not only Coptic distress should be internationalized.
In his article, author Hānī Labīb, a Copt, retorts to the opinions of a leading expatriate Copt whom throughout the article he described as a “pretender of intellect” [Reviewer: The author has not mentioned the name of this Coptic leader – a likely reference to ‘Adlī Abādīr].

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