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Religious establishments have to move with the times if they are going to capably confront the flood of sectarian sentiments coming in via satellite TV and the Internet.
Coverage on President Mubarak’s visit to the United States continue in this issue, and Dr. Sayyid al-Qimnī’s work is discussed by Dr. ‘Abd al-Mu‘tī Bayyūmī.
On October 18, Egyptian newspapers were full of reports about rumors of the head of the Muslim Brotherhood’s resignation. However by the following day Mahdī ‘Ākif has renounced the allegations as baseless lies and stated that he would remain as the head of the group until the scheduled elections in...
The editorial looks at interesting articles in this week’s issue such as ones about Muslims leaving money in their wills to church building and recent sectarian incidents in Minia. The question of religious conflicts being motivated essentially by differences in faith is also raised.
There are a number of fascinating articles in this issue of AWR that reflect the diverse nature of the various currents in Egyptian society and the debates that have gripped the nation over the past week.
Fundamentalism and discrimination have existed throughout history in different variants. The issue now is whether we can learn from history and make prejudice and intolerance words of the past.
Why don’t some Coptic news websites cite their sources?
AWR Editor-in-Chief Cornelius Hulsman writes about recent events in Naj‘ Hammādī: The first response to a tragedy like this is that the perpetrators must be caught and punished under Egyptian law. We also have to make best efforts to understand the motivations of the murderers since a correct...
The participation of Egypt’s Christian minority in political life is a topic that arouses many passions. Perhaps a conference attended by all parties is the best way to make a start on resolving the issue, as long as honesty and transparency predominate.
What role can the Egyptian media play in resolving inter-religious conflict and reconciling differences?

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