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Friday Links — November 27, 2009


Posted by fatemeh on 27 Nov 2009 / 0 Comment
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  • ABC’s Lama Hasan reports on her abaya issues from Hajj. Couldn’t think of anything more pressing related to women’s issues and Hajj? Huh.
  • SAAYA hosts a program to educate Muslim women in Tamil Nadu about government welfare programs.
  • Hijabtrendz reflects on her experience of reporting the news in a headscarf.
  • A woman in Syria breaks gender barriers by owning a car wash.
  • Muslim women at Scotland’s biggest mosque are pushing for the right to have their opinions included in the community’s discourse. Via Islam in Europe.
  • The Peninsula reports that socio-cultural barriers impede women’s progress.
  • Naledi Pandor felt the recent education summit in Qatar reflected the achievements of men only and ignored Africa’s education issues.
  • A Muslim doctor interviewing for a job at a suburban Dallas medical clinic says officials there told her she couldn’t wear her headscarf in the workplace.
  • Global Comment highlights Sheema Kermani and her part in Pakistani feminism.
  • ExxonMobile Qatar Inc. supports women’s education initiatives.
  • The Deseret News reports on newly graduated female police officers in Iraqi police forces.
  • Hijab Style interviews designer Irna Mutiara.
  • Haaretz asks why fewer Arab women work in the Israeli job market than the Saudi Arabian one.
  • Saudi Arabian contestant Muwadda Nour wins Miss Arab World, but receives catty press.
  • 70% of Muslims in France think polygyny should be banned in the country.
  • Greater equality for India’s Muslims can mean greater equality for Muslim women in India.
  • Saudi Jeans gives Dr. Fawzia Al-Bakr’s perspective on how things are for women in Saudi Arabia.
  • The Washington Post profiles an American Muslim woman’s journey to marriage.
  • On Fashion Week in Pakistan.
  • After Lubna Al-Hussein escaped Sudan, a slew of articles have popped up about her.
  • The new “burqa shades” are catching everyone’s attention.
  • ReliefWeb writes about domestic abuse in Tajikistan.
  • GOATMILK brings the “mystery of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui” to light.
  • Hijab Style interviews the designer behind Farashati clothing in the U.A.E.
  • BlogHer tries to find the lost girls of Sudan.
  • Where are all the female Kuwaiti judges?
  • French rapper Diam’s is still performing after her conversion.
  • A consulting group believes that Islamic banks should target female consumers more.
  • The wife of Malaysia’s Prime Minister, Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor, works on improving things for women and children in the country.
  • The mixed-gender university in Saudi Arabia has riled up some of the country’s clerics. Surprise!
  • The Daily Star criticizes Lebanon’s domestic violence laws.
  • The ruler of the Ajman, U.A.E., stresses the importance of women in national arenas.
  • Al Jazeera profiles the pilgrimage of a Kenyan Muslim woman.
  • The Jakarta Post reports that Indonesian civil service laws currently discriminate against women who wear headscarves.
  • The Christian Science Monitor highlights a Barbie collection that includes burqas and gets everyone’s underwear in a twist. Do. Not. Read. The. Comments.
  • Know an influential European Muslim woman? Nominate her for the European Muslim Women of Influence List 2010!
  • Muslim women seek an even playing field in football.
  • Girls’ schools in Afghanistan attempt to survive amid attacks from the Taliban.
  • The Guardian highlights how women’s rights have deteriorated  in Kyrgyzstan after the Soviet Union fell.
  • Natasha Fatah writes about double standards in mosques that span the globe.
  • The Huffington Post highlights why the recent attack on a woman wearing a headscarf is a hate crime.
  • IslamOnline reviews The Hijabi Monologues. So does The Daily Vanguard.
  • The National reports that Kuwait won’t force its female MPs to wear headscarves.
  • Malalai Joy speaks with GRITtv and The Star about Afghanistan’s occupation.

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