• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Archives / April 2013

Introducing MMW’s Newest Writers!


Posted by Krista Riley on 30 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Hello and salaams MMW friends, The MMW team is excited to announce that we’ve recently welcomed six new writers on board!  We are very happy that the following women (listed along with their recent guest posts, so you can get a sense of their writing if you haven’t already) have joined our team of regular […]

Read more →
Culture/Society

Interview with Celebrity Food Blogger Thasneen Ansi


Posted by izzie on 30 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Cooking hasn’t been one of my strong points ever, and after getting married to a family whose cuisine was completely different to mine, I was lost. Since most of the dishes prepared in my husband’s home are unique, their recipes were pretty hard to find online as well. That’s when I found Thasneen Ansi’s blog […]

Read more →

Sri Lanka: “When Sleeping Women Wake, Mountains Move”


Posted by Guest Contributor on 29 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by guest contributor Hafsa, and originally published at Sisterhood. Last June, while visiting a north-western province in Sri Lanka, I had the chance of observing a community development initiative that focused on women’s empowerment and enhancing their role in participatory democracy. One of interesting prescripts that I observed was that most […]

Read more →

Friday Links | April 26, 2013


Posted by anneke on 26 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



There were, of course, a lot of news items related to the (female) relatives of the alleged “Boston bombers” this week: there were interviews with the mother and the aunt, and a lot of speculation about both the mother and the converted wife of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, Katherine Russell. One Muslim woman in the Boston area has reported […]

Read more →
Books/Magazines

The Mother and the Motherland in Arab Literature


Posted by tasnim on 25 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Moroccan novelist Mohammed Berrada’s Lu’bat al Nisyan (The Game of Forgetting, 1987) begins with “In the Beginning was the Mother.”   The main character in the novel, Hadi, is a leftist journalist suffering from a midlife crisis, disillusioned on the communal level by the deteriorating political situation in Morocco, and devastated on a personal level […]

Read more →

Hijab and the Boston Bombers


Posted by nicolejhm on 24 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by guest contributor Nicole J. Hunter Mostafa (@nicolejhm). Ladies, let’s be honest: hijab is a tired topic for us Muslimahs. We still debate, discuss, and attempt to define it, but pretty much everything has been said at some point or another. But for some, it apparently never gets old. And now, […]

Read more →
Art/Theater

Colours and Voices: The International Museum of Women Muslima


Posted by eren on 23 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



After converting to Islam, I struggled with my community’s views on art, women and the combination of both. Having grown up in a society that prides itself on a variety of artistic movements, and being part of a very artistic family, I felt uncomfortable accepting my Muslim community’s idea that art is prohibited in Islam. […]

Read more →
Fashion

The Colourful Hijab of the African Muslimah


Posted by anike on 22 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The Darfur Sartorialist is an exhibition launched by Portuguese urban engineer, humanitarian and photographer Pedro Matos to showcase the colourful clothing and trendy fashion sense of women in Darfur, Sudan. Matos was in Darfur for three and a half years with the World Food Programme when he started taking these photographs in a country where […]

Read more →

Friday Links | April 19, 2013


Posted by anneke on 19 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Nausheen Tobassum, a 17-year-old Indian girl, shares her horrific story as an “one month wife,” and reveals the scope of the sex tourism business in Hyderabad, India. More and more young Afghan men and women meet each other on Facebook; in a society where dating is strictly prohibited, many young men and women have (multiple) relationships online. […]

Read more →

The Cracking Façade of Tradition and Patriarchy


Posted by Guest Contributor on 17 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by guest contributor Yasmin N. Ali. I was seventeen years old when I first encountered, in full force, the hierarchies that are often built into many Muslim communities.  Back then, I was fighting to make my debate team coed so I’d get one more year of experience before I graduated high […]

Read more →
123