Date of source: Saturday, November 18, 2006
Ahmad ‘Arafāt al-Qādī explains some fundamentalist Western
thinkers’
arguments about the basic principles between the Christian West and the Muslim East. The
difference between the two
civilizations is a basic one, and the clash is inevitable.
Date of source: Monday, November 20, 2006
Islam promotes and celebrates diversity of mankind. had God
wanted all people to believe in one
religion, He would have made it so.
Date of source:
Two different articles in Sout al-Azhar
and al-Musawar handled the Islamic
conquest of Egypt and its motives and circumstances. The article of Sout al-Azhar
attributed the conquest
to the importance of Egypt due to its geographical situation and its historical prestige as head of
civilization...
Date of source: Sunday, November 12, 2006
The author asserts that Egypt is becoming Bedouinised. In part 1 of his study on this subject, the
author discusses Bedouin history and culture.
Date of source: Saturday, October 28, 2006
Ahmad Khālid continues his series of articles answering the pope’s controversial
declarations against Islām. In his fourth article he asserts that Islām is a religion of truth that exalts God
above everything. Islām, like Christianity before it, came to fulfill the world’s needs.
Date of source: Thursday, October 26, 2006
Explaining the broad meaning of the concept of jihād in Islām, Muslim thinker Rajab al-Bannā quoted famous British writer Karen Armstrong’s definition of it as "struggle and effort, not a synonym for holy war as Westerners define it." Ahmad ‘Izz al-Dīn al-‘Arab wrote in a short article in al-Wafd...
Date of source: Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Pope
Shenouda praised the cooperation between Muslims and
Copts as well as the Arab conquest in a book of his dialogue
with French Orthodox priest Alfonse Guttmann.
Date of source: Sunday, October 15, 2006
The author articulates some basic rules of interfaith dialogue, which he asserts should be followed by all parties.
Date of source: Sunday, October 15, 2006
The author discusses Western hostility against Islam.
Date of source: Friday, October 13, 2006
The French Parliament adopted a law,
imposing jail
sanctions against anyone who denies the Turkish holocaust committed against Armenians during the
First World
War. The law aroused wide arguments in France, Turkey and the European Union in general.