Displaying 11 - 20 of 22.
In a sarcastic style, Mustafá Bayyūmī criticizes the Takfīr thesis against Rose al- Yūsuf for not being up to par with academic research. He also criticizes the supervisors and regrets that the deep-rooted Azhar recognize such works, calling on all men of intellect to face the Takfīr...
After the Muslim Brotherhood announced their plan to change the ‘banned’ group into a legal political party, many voices were raised in an evaluation of the group’s role in the political life throughout its history.
Najīb Mahfūz’s novels are full of religious symbols. Many religious notions have become moral ones through time, language and social traditions.
The author of the article, Mustafá Bayyūmī, provides a literary analysis of some of Najīb Mahfūz’s works, highlighting the great writer’s allusions to the companions of the Prophet Muhammad in most of his writings.
Mustafa Bayyūmī analyses the images of God’s prophets used in the novels of Najīb Mahfūz.
The author discusses journalists’ angry reactions to a suggestion made by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood in parliament that journalists be whipped instead of jailed.
The author harshly criticizes an editorial in the al -Mukhtār al-Islāmī magazine that relentlessly attacked the journalist, Sa‘īd Shu‘ayb, who conducted a controversial interview with Muhammad Mahdī ‘Ākif, the Murshid of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood group, and Rose al- Yousuf newspaper for...
The Muslim Brotherhood’s demonstrations in support of the independence of the Egyptian judiciary have posed many questions over the group’s respect for the current “positive laws,” Mustafa Bayyoumī writes.
Dr. Nawāl al-Sa‘dāwī is a remarkable figure in Egyptian literature, but she seems to spend more time causing controversy than actually writing, incessantly looking for fame.
Mustafa Bayyoumī criticizes al-Dustour newspaper and its editor-in-chief Ibrāhīm ‘Īsa for what he calls "attempts to irresponsibly incite the masses by seizing any occasion, good or bad, to stir sentiments against the government", describing al-Dustour as a "school of journalistic adolescence."

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