• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Archives / June 2012

Friday Links | June 15, 2012


Posted by anneke on 15 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



More than a third of Turkish women have experienced sexual and physical violence at some point, but an anti-violence law was watered down in Turkey last March.  Activists now fear the erosion of women’s rights and increasing gender based violence. While violence between the Buddhist majority and Muslim minority in Burma/Myanmar is still increasing, neighbouring […]

Read more →
Culture/Society

#UAEDressCode: A Tool for Judgement, or Education?


Posted by samya on 14 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



A few years back, when shopping malls turned into major destination for shoppers and tourists in the United Arab Emirates, the issue of how men and women appear in public began to gain greater attention. Mall entrances have come to carry signs and instructions relating not only to pets, trash, bicycles and skaters, but dress […]

Read more →
Culture/Society

“The Polygamist is Political”: Muslim Women and the Issue of Polygamy in the West


Posted by eren on 14 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



A few months ago, while reviewing one of my friend’s profiles on Facebook, I was surprised to see the amount of discussion that Shari’ah rulings regarding marriage provoke in the West. My friend, an orthodox Sunni Muslim and avid follower of the Hanbali school, had commented in a picture from 2010 that depicted Malaysian women […]

Read more →
Music/Radio

Ridiculing Boko Haram Where It Hurts


Posted by anike on 13 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Editor’s Note: Please join me in welcoming Anike, MMW’s newest contributor!  You may know her better from her blog as “cosmic yoruba.”  We’re thrilled to have Anike join the MMW team. It is still quite rare to come across depictions of Muslim women in “mainstream” Ghanaian or Nigerian media. (By “mainstream”, I am referring to […]

Read more →

“Lost” Girls Are Not Sex Objects – Whatever Their Race: Part II


Posted by merium on 12 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



In light of several interesting comments to my previous post on the Rochdale “grooming” case, I decided a follow-up piece was in order. Much of the furore surrounding the case has been with respect to race and its alleged role in the attack, specifically: does the “Asian” (Pakistani and thereby Muslim) origin of the attackers […]

Read more →

Revelations As A Result Of Hidden Cameras in Sweden’s Mosques


Posted by Guest Contributor on 11 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The post was written by guest contributor Maheen Nusrat. In the latest episode of Swedish television channel SVT’s investigative news programme Uppdrag granskning, ten Swedish mosques were visited, and in six of them, imams were caught on camera giving advice harmful to women and contrary to Swedish law.  (An unofficial subtitled version of the episode, […]

Read more →

Friday Links | June 8, 2012


Posted by anneke on 08 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



An Indian High Court has decided that the marriage of a 16-year old Muslim girl, who was married without parental consent at age 15, is valid and she can stay in her matrimonial home, even though the legal age of marriage in India is 18. Her mother is against the marriage, saying she was kidnapped, but the girl testified that she left […]

Read more →
Culture/Society

Re-Engaging with the Other “Liberation Theology”


Posted by sana on 07 Jun 2012 / 3 Comments
Tweet



Complete with your standard extreme close-up of a hijab-clad woman confusingly looking at the voyeuristic lens before her, the Guardian’s “Comment is Free” section recently featured a piece by writer Nadiya Takolia, entitled: “The Hijab has Liberated Me From Society’s Expectations of Women.” Probably like many readers of this blog, my initial reaction consisted something […]

Read more →
Culture/Society

Yet Another Sensationalist Story about Muslim Girls and Swimming Lessons


Posted by nicole on 06 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Certain topics related to Muslims seem to go on and on like broken records in European countries. If it isn’t headscarves, it is swimming lessons (like these stories from Germany, Finland, and Norway).  This spring, a story about yet another Muslim family refusing swimming lessons made headlines in Switzerland.  In Basel, the families of five […]

Read more →
News

Zarifa Qazizadah: Afghan Supergran


Posted by safiyaoutlines on 05 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



To people of a certain age, the word Supergran might bring to mind a Scottish superhero from the 80’s, but this week a headline about an Afghan “supergran” was a world away from Saturday afternoon TV. The article tells us that Zarifah Qazizadah is Afghanistan’s only female village chief; in fact, she’s only the second […]

Read more →
123