Displaying 121 - 130 of 369.
The Muftī of Egypt Dr ‘Alī Jum‘ah issued a controversial fatwá that a pregnant woman whose husband had died or left for four years cannot be considered an adulteress.
The following article addresses Mahmūd ‘Āmir’s attack against the Shī‘ah and the political and religious danger they bring to Egypt and the Islamic world, by comparing them to the Muslim Brotherhood. ‘Āmir blames the Azhar leadership and the National Democeratic Party for their support of...
Many hadīth were falsified over time. Islam is a religion that needs a renaissance to reveal its true image.
Ramadān al-Baih states the criteria for a good, reliable muftī.
The Egyptian muftī, Shaykh ‘Alī Jum‘ah, was severely slammed by a number of Muslim scholars for his recent fatwá, in which he permits mobile phone companies to install their towers on mosque minarets.
Muhammad al-Bāz wonders whether Shaykh al-Qaradāwī really deserved the humiliation and insults that Moroccan clergy directed at him after his controversial fatwá on bank interest.
Egyptian Shaykh al-Qaradāwī pronounced a fatwá that enables Moroccans to use bank interest to obtain accommodation. The fatwá aroused the anger of Moroccan Muslim intellectuals who considered it interference in Morocco’s interior affairs.
A recent fatwá by prominent Muslim intellectual Jamāl al-Bannā, stating that smoking does not spoil fasting has sparked massive controversy amongst Muslim scholars and clerics who described the fatwá as "totally irresponsible" and contrary to the teaching of Islam.
Subtitle: 1- The leader of the organization says, "When Dr. Yehia Ismael said that Hanafy was an apostate, we decided to kill him" 2- The one who was supposed to carry out the operation says, "The plan was to kill him with penknives. I have trained on how to do this in Nozha" 3- An official...
The author criticises the fatwa declaring Dr. Hassan Hanafy to be an apostate and explains how Dr. Hanafy’s work was taken out of context, and twisted to imply that he opposed Islam.

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