The author writes that when she heard that a three-story building in ‘Umrāniyyah had been converted into a mosque, she asked her newspaper editor if he would confirm this, which he did by sending a reporter there.
She comments on the strange timing and speed of converting this unfinished building into a mosque, especially when such great difficulties were experienced in obtaining a license for a church.
Na‘ūt points out that children were photographed standing in front of the mosque making victory signs, while giving the thumbs-down sign while standing before the church. She also refers to the deliberately loud the call to prayers in mosques adjacent to churches.
The author denounces an article written by an unidentified man, in which he addresses such issues as a struggle between religions, likening his words to "the diseased cough emanating from the lungs of a tuberculosis sufferer."
"I intended to address this article to the Governor of Giza," Na‘ūt says, in hopes that the governor may investigate the issue of licensing for the mosque, "just as he massed his armies against the church."
"We now require a cultural, educational, and enlightening revolution which which would attempt to repair what the Wahābist tide has spoiled," Na‘ūt concludes.