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I remember some happenings from my childhood. I remember that some of the neighbors I used to play with were Armenians and Levantine, but I also remember that the Copts we used to play with were our closest brothers as we were all the children of one nation, Egypt.
Sectarian strife would not exist if there were civil laws protecting religious liberties, if the government and government officials were trained to deal with such occurrences effectively and openly, and if the media played its role.
The story is about the 15-year old Muslim Yasmīn, in al-Sawām‘a, village who disappeared suddenly on December 30.
Fahmī Huwaydī addressed a case of sectarian strife [the issue of Wafā’ Costantine] in his article in al-Ahrām. The article is significant because Huwaydī is a prominent political Islamist and al-Ahrām is a widely circulated newspaper. The purpose of this article is not to correct the misinformation...
The thing I liked most about Anbā Bisantī’s interview was that immense amount of candor, clarity and free expression of ideas but I was uneasy about some ideas he mentioned.
I reckon that the church administration has mishandled the Wafā’ Costantine issue and that its very policies have reflected on the Egyptian Copts themselves, said Judge Tāriq al-Bishrī, a veteran judge and a specialist researcher in minorities affairs, in an interview.
Dr. ‘Alī Jumca, Muftī of Egypt, allowed the cremating the bodies of the victims of the Tsunami that hit Asia, in order to prevent the spread of epidemics. This opinion raised arguments in Egypt and the Azhar.
The Qur’ān has never used the language of intimidation or terrorism to impose the Muslim point of view. On the contrary, the Qur’ān clearly states that “There is no compulsion in religion” [Chapter of al-Baqara (the Cow) 2: 256], giving people the freedom to believe whatever they choose to believe...
Egypt’s Interior Minister Habīb al-‘Ādlī made the first official announcement that Iran handed over the fugitive Mustafa Hamza to Egypt, on the sidelines of the Arab interior ministers meeting recently held in Tunisia.
Muntasir al-Zayyāt, lawyer of al-Jamā‘a al-Islāmīya said in an interview with Sawt al-Umma that he might be put in jail soon by the security apparatuses or killed by al-Jamāca which has accused him of working for the security authorities.

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