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Archives / March 2012

Friday Links | March 30, 2012


Posted by Krista Riley on 30 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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Anneke’s traveling this week and next, so I’ll be writing up the lists of links.  My apologies in advance for lists that will be shorter and less comprehensive than usual (and many thanks to Anneke who sent most of these links to me despite how hectic things are!) The murder of Shaima Alawadi, an Iraqi-American […]

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Book Review: Desperate in Dubai


Posted by safiyyah on 29 Mar 2012 / 3 Comments
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Desperate in Dubai, a cheeky exposé novel based on the original blog written by Ameera al-Hakawati (a pseudonym), revolves around the lives of four women who live, love, and labour in the sparkling Gulf city of Dubai. I recently had the chance to catch up with al-Hakawati in Dubai, to chat about her book, her […]

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Which Muslim Women Should Every Person Know?


Posted by Krista Riley on 28 Mar 2012 / 1 Comment
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In a recent article for the Huffington Post, titled “10 Muslim Women Every Person Should Know,” Fazeela Siddiqui writes: “[I]n recent years, due to the global socio-political climate, the phrase “Muslim woman” might conjure an image of a demure un-empowered woman sheltered by her burqa. Yet this image is not what our history records or […]

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From Images of Piety to the Arab Spring and Anonymous Women in Burkas


Posted by eren on 27 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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The World Press Photo contest is a competition where the best professional photographers have a chance to showcase their work. The contest focuses on photojournalism and features photographers from all over the world. Last year the controversial photo of Bibi Aisha, taken by Jodi Bieber and featured in Time Magazine (which MMW covered here), won […]

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FundaMattel: Sub-Satrapi Bollocks Masquerading as Art


Posted by safiyaoutlines on 26 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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Burqa, burqa, burqa. Will we ever reach the stage where there is nothing more to say on the subject? Sometimes I think we’ve covered every angle of critique, but then there comes yet idiocy to be challenged. Worse still, this is idiocy in the name of art. Witness artist Rachel Joy’s latest work. Here we […]

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Friday Links | March 23, 2012


Posted by anneke on 23 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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Several of hundreds of activists have been protesting against the Moroccan “rape law“, after Amina Filali’s death on March 10. At the same time, the force behind the marriage of Amina and her rapist, Amina’s mother, says that she regrets the marriage, but that she did not really have a choice. A British Muslim juror […]

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Book Review: Miroirs et Mirages by Monia Mazigh


Posted by Guest Contributor on 22 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by Chelby Marie Daigle and originally published at The Woyingi Blog. Miroirs et mirages is the first novel by Tunisian Canadian Monia Mazigh, who is better known for her work as a human rights activist. Mazigh came to Canada in 1991 to study Finance in Montreal. She subsequently met and married her husband, […]

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Sarabah Reviewed: Sister Fa and FGM in Senegal


Posted by azra on 21 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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Sarabah follows the life of Senegalese rapper Fatou Mandiang Diatta, better known as Sister Fa, and her quest to address female genital mutilation (FGM)* in her village in Senegal. After releasing her first album and marrying a German PhD student, she found herself in Germany working on her music and wanting to commit to raising […]

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Saudi Female Students Spark a Revolution


Posted by samya on 20 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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On a quiet Saturday morning, while browsing the web for the day’s news, a story from Saudi Arabia caught my attention: thousands of female university students at the King Khalid University in the southern city of Abha were reported protesting against against poor on-campus sanitary services. According to Emirati newspaper Al Bayan, one of the […]

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Hayv Kahraman: ”Telling Tales of Horror with a Demure Grace”


Posted by tasnim on 19 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
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Hayv Kahraman is an Iraqi artist whose work reflects on issues of gender, looking at the victimization of women during war, and the effects of practices such as honor killings and genital mutilation, as well as alienation, marginalization, and displacement. Kahraman addresses these contemporary issues through paintings which have a classical and timeless feel to […]

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