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Mona Eltahawy's controversial article in <i>Foreign Policy</i> magazineAn Attempt to Portray Arab Women as Victims
In the May/June special issue of the American magazine Foreign Policy, the Egyptian-American journalist Mona Eltahawy published an article claiming that the root of women's problems in the Middle East is quite simply that men hate them. Opinions on the article differ widely. Joseph Mayton asked a number of women in Tunisia and Egypt what they thought of it
By Joseph Mayton -
Europe's ''Judeo-Christian Heritage''
The Fiction That It Always Was
Contemporary debate over Europe's identity increasingly refers to the continent's Christian or Judeo-Christian heritage. But a closer look at the history books belies this theory and teaches us that for centuries, Islam and Judaism have played an integral role in shaping European history and that both religions have been regarded with deep hostility down through the centuries. By Stefan Schreiner
By Stefan Schreiner -
Islamic Law and Ethics''We Are Calling for a New Interpretation of the Koran''
A new research centre in Qatar seeks to focus more attention on the ethical dimension of Islam. The founders of the centre and its director, Tariq Ramadan, are calling for a new interpretation of the Koran in order to advance a contemporary Islamic understanding of matters such as environmental ethics and gender issues. Christoph Dreyer spoke to the centre's deputy director, Jasser Auda
By Christoph Dreyer -
The Holy Month of RamadanTo Fast or Not to Fast
None of the five pillars of Islam is observed by as many Muslims as fasting in Ramadan. Some people who don't otherwise obey any religious rules fast; others make a conscious decision not to. Stephanie Doetzer spoke to a number of Muslims who have decided not to fast
By Stephanie Doetzer -
The Iraqi Education SystemEducation in an Age of Terror
Once renowned throughout the Arab world for the importance it attached to good education, Iraq and its education system have suffered enormously since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein nine years ago. Many intellectuals fled abroad or into the provinces of Iraqi Kurdistan, triggering change in the education system there. Birgit Svensson reports from Baghdad
By Birgit Svensson -
Woman in Saudi Arabia''A Golden Age for Saudi Women''
Gabriela Keseberg Dávalos recently visited Saudi Arabia on a UN fellowship. What she encountered there surprised her and completely changed her views on the lives of women in the kingdom. This is a personal account of her experiences
By Gabriela Keseberg Dávalos -
The Response to the Salafist Movement in GermanyHeavy on Populism, Light on Strategic Thinking
Many intelligence officials in Germany are baffled by the political response to the Salafist movement. As far as they are concerned, there is too much populism, not enough strategic thinking, and ineffective communication to boot. Albrecht Metzger reports.
By Albrecht Metzger -
School Reform in TurkeyIslam Set to Gain Prominence
Emotions have been running high in Turkey since the government pushed through a controversial school reform bill earlier this year. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan has said that the goal of the reform was to raise a "religious youth". Sonja Galler reports from Diyarbakır
By Sonja Galler -
Syrian Refugees in Iraq
Exodus into the Unknown
Birgit Svensson visits a refugee camp in Dohuk in Iraqi Kurdistan where she finds Shefat and her brother Omar: they want to tell the world about the terrible things that are happening to the Syrian people
By Birgit Svensson -
Interview with Mohammad Mojtahed Shabestari
Why Islam and Democracy Go Well Together
The Shiite scholar Mohammad Mojtahed Shabestari is regarded as one of the Iran's most influential Muslim reformist thinkers. In an interview with Jan Kuhlmann, he explains why there is no inconsistency between Islam and democracy.
By Jan Kuhlmann -
German Court Ruling over Ritual CircumcisionKulturkampf against Muslims and Jews
A court in Germany has ruled that circumcision on religious grounds amounts to bodily harm, making it potentially punishable by law. Sociologist of religion Rolf Schieder says this is an unacceptable move that questions the right to religious freedom
By Rolf Schieder -
The Shia-Sunni ConflictThe Most Deadly Religious War of our Time
Preachers like the Sunni legal scholar Yusuf Al-Qaradawi or the Shia Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati are propagating sectarian hate and exacerbating the divide between Islam's two major denominations. In this essay, Stefan Buchen explains how the religious war they have helped to unleash within Islam is having a catastrophic effect on the Greater Middle East
By Stefan Buchen
Most read articles
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Egypt's hundred-year-old whodunnit revisited
Murder in the brothel – Raya, Sakina and the 17 female corpses
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Cherien Dabis's "All That's Left of You"
Palestinian identity on screen
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Syrian women in Assadʹs prisons
No end to Bashar's crimes against humanity
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The Trojan Horse scandal in the UK
Islamists in the classroom?
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Afghan Female Artists in Berlin
Straightening the Pictures
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Women in Saudi Arabia
Caught in a System of Gender Apartheid