Displaying 11 - 20 of 100.
Kees Hulsman and Sawsan Gabra discuss the “Christian cause” in Egypt, and the damage that it is faced with as a resulted of reporting distorted facts.
The following article discusses the exaggerated interpretations of some Western Christians about the position of Christians in Egypt.
The author condemns the fact that no one honored Farag Foda, neither in his life nor after his death, although he fought extremism and was assassinated because of his anti-terrorism ideas. He sheds light on the role Foda played in fighting terrorism.
Dr. Rif‘at al-Sa‘īd presents an overview of the emergence of violence in the ideologies of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic groups that followed it, believing that religious slogans were used as a cover to justify the use of violence against society.
Khālid Muntasir writes about the assassination of Faraj Fūdah and the accusations directed against him. These accusations include Fūdah’s rejection of the application of Islamic Sharī‘ah, having seen no positive impact of its application in other countries.
Ibrāhīm Jād Allāh writes about Faraj Fūdah, his ideas and many writings. He highlights the ideals that Fūdah would write about, which eventually brought about his assassination, and stresses that Fūdah wrote about what he believed in, regardless of threats that he received.
The writer criticizes the State’s control of the people’s right to freely express and criticize the corruption in Egypt. He advocates criticism of the damaged regime, hoping that it will enable change.
Rose al-Yousuf magazine has recently been astonished by two successive statements: the first by the Jihād organization issuing a death threat to writer Sayyid al-Qimnī if he does not renounce his thoughts and writings, and the second by al-Qimnī himself announcing his renunciation of all the...
Egypt’s al-Jihād group has stunned public opinion with its recent announcement that it killed al-Ahrām journalist Ridā Hilāl, whose mysterious disappearance a couple of years ago bewildered the security agencies.
The author comments on political Islam, and the people that have fought to combat this image of Islam. She further comments on controversial Fatwás, as well as Muslim-Christian relations.

Pages

Subscribe to