Displaying 51 - 60 of 181.
The article examines the human rights course at Alexandria University which teaches students that Bahā’ī marriage is not legally valid and that Egyptian Christians are second class citizens.
The following article presents a response to Majdī Khalīl’s article [art. 26 in this issue].
Mahdī Bunduq presents a historical background of Muslim-Christian relations since the Islamic invasion of Egypt in 641 A.D. until the establishment of modern state in the 19th century.
The article presents a personal impression of a trip to Dayr Abū Ḥinnis, and includes discussions on Muslim-Christian relations and church building.
The author sympathizes with the expatriate Copts and asserts that they are not collaborators but part of Egypt. They left Egypt after the 1967 setback and are still psychologically affected by the dictatorial regime which prevailed at this time.
Politicians, thinkers, and human right activists have asserted that the long-awaited platform of the banned Muslim Brotherhood group is a huge jump backward in politics as it clearly rules women and Coptic citizens out of high leading positions.
The Muslim Brotherhood’s agenda is an attempt to establish an Islamic theocracy in Egypt in the name of civil state. The group is manipulating people and using vague language to achieve their aims.
In the article, Islamic thinker Dr. Sayyid al-Qimnī responds to a discussion by the Muslim Brotherhood senior leader Mr. ‘Abd al-Mun‘im Abū al-Futūh...
Eng. Kamāl Fawzī Dūs, a member of the Egyptian Businessmen Council in Emirates, highlights three different frameworks that governed the way non-Muslims should be treated in Muslim communities. He adds that these frameworks secured equality among citizens, giving them the right to build and restore...
The author discusses the recent constitutional amendments, and the concept of citizenship that has been stressed therein. He looks back in history on the skewed perceptions of citizenship which may have caused the threat posed to freedom and social peace in Egypt today. He further underlines the...

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