• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Friday Links — August 13, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 13 Aug 2010 / 0 Comment
Tweet



  • A new study says that pregnant women shouldn’t fast. More from The Huffington Post.
  • Yasmin Sajid Sheikh of India aspires to be a policewoman and a role model for “progressive Muslim women.”
  • Campaigning against stoning is still necessary.
  • This is a much better way to address matches with the Iranian women’s soccer team. Take note, Daily Mail!
  • Al-Ahram Weekly asks whether the ban on the wearing of the face veil in Syrian schools and universities is motivated by support for secularism or by fear of the influence of Islamist trends. Syria Today also weighs in.
  • The Kyiv Post highlights Muslim women in the Ukraine.
  • Muslim women in India “have had enough of mullah interference.”
  • Statistics show that more Afghan women are attempting suicide.
  • On the “new Scheherazades.”
  • The BBC presents artwork by female Saudi photographers.
  • ILLUME discusses Aisha’s Time cover. Alternet weighs in about war victims and how their images are used. And Colorlines discusses how the cover obscures the horror of war. Aisha was in the U.S. this week to have reconstructive surgery on her nose.
  • What the veil means when everyone wears one.
  • An Egyptian woman has gone public with a rare television interview alleging that police raped her after she stopped to ask for directions in a rural part of the country. May Allah give her justice.
    • NATO forces kill 39 women and children in Afghanistan. May Allah give them peace and justice.
    • On inter-caste marriage in India.
    • A Lebanese composer and a singer have released a track that parodies popular Arabic songs considered by some to be patriarchal and demeaning to women.
    • CBS News wants to introduce you to “the women of Hezbollah.”
    • The Guardian has an exclusive interview with Sakineh Ashtiani. She has aired a “confession” on state television, which many believe to be forced.
    • India’s largest and most influential madrasa recently issued a fatwa declaring that appointing a woman as a judge is near haram. More here.
    • Bikya Masr reports that violence against women in Egypt is on the rise.
    • Saudi females working as cashiers at Azizia Panda supermarkets have expressed delight over their new jobs and encouraging comments from customers.
    • A study published last month by the Fund for the Prevention and Treatment of Addiction and Abuse revealed that drug addition increases the sexual exploitation of girls in Egypt.
    • The head of a religious TV network in Saudi Arabia claims that female scholars are not willing to appear on television.
    • Electronic Intifada interviews Suheir Hammad about the role she plays in the Salt of This Sea movie.
    • Maktoob discusses the wealth of Saudi women. Via elan.
    • France’s interior minister called for immigrants who practice polygamy or female genital mutilation to have their citizenship withdrawn.
    • Iraq has a “disastrously high number of widows.”

    If there’s any news about Muslim women from this week that we missed, feel free to post links in the comments!

    Related Posts


    Film Review: 3 Seconds Divorce
    July 18, 2019

    Filling in the Gaps: Working Towards Inclusive Education
    May 15, 2018

    Do Muslim Sportswomen Really Need Nike to Save Them?
    December 11, 2017


    • Find us on Facebook

    • Recent Posts

      • Film Review: 3 Seconds Divorce
      • The Intersections of Latinx Identities, Islam and Gendered Narratives
      • Book Review: The Tower by Shereen Malherbe
      • Taking Back the Narrative, One Panel at a Time
      • No Country For Travelling Women
    • Recent Comments

      • Mynaijabaze on Remembering Siti on Ramadan
      • Faye on Ramadan ~ Maybe Next Year
      • Shawn Smith on Ramadan ~ Maybe Next Year
      • aziza shaikh on Remembering the Quebec City Mosque Shooting, One Year Later
      • Mohammad shakoor on Saints and Misfits and Everything in Between
    • Authors

    • Archives

    • Categories