• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Friday Links — September 12, 2008


Posted by fatemeh on 12 Sep 2008 / 0 Comment
Tweet



  • Sudanese women use politics to inspire fashion.
  • More news about the four Iranian women’s rights activists who have been jailed. Payvand News features an article from one of the three women.
  • Faisal al Yafai writes eloquently about feminism in the Muslim Middle East and Western feminists’ problem with the veil. Cycads weighs in.
  • Clothing store Mango plans to open in Tehran by the end of the year. I am jealous.
  • Afghan women become policewomen in Herat. Via GlobalVoices.
  • Rickshaw Diaries covers Islamic Fashion Week. Via DeenPort.
  • Middle East Online interviews Maheen Zia, founder of the Union for Short Filmmakers of Muslim Countries.
  • Yemen Journey explains how her viewpoint on Islamic orthodoxy has changed after visiting Tarim, Yemen and whether women should visit without mahram escorts. Via DeenPort.
  • Latifah Wadih of New York is missing. Via Islamify. Etidal Abdullah of Lackawanna, New York, is also missing. May Allah keep them safe. Mujahideen Ryder has a post about what you can do. Via DeenPort.
  • More news on the lawyer who won a discrimination case, which we reported on last week.
  • And more news on the abandonment of the Iranian polygamy bill.
  • Syria has opened its first women’s shelter. Improvisations gives her two cents.
  • The Saudi Gazette reports on an Egyptian female-only beach.
  • A sole woman has been appointed to a previously all-male Indian waqf board.
  • The burqa will be banned in Dutch schools and universities. Islam in Europe gives a historic rundown of the issue.
  • The Yemen Times features an article about Muslim women in marriage…written by a Muslim man.
  • More news about Muslim swimsuits!
  • Nuseiba discusses the image of the veiled Muslim woman on the cover of books.
  • Achelois gives her thoughts on Queen Rania as a representative of Muslim women and shares two important websites that can spread awareness of human rights abuses.
  • Kyla Pasha writes about the Baluchi honor killings in Pakistan for GlobalComment.
  • HijabMan has two more posts about marriage in the Muslim community.
  • Improvisations reports that a Saudi women’s rights group is launching a campaign against early marriages and that a Saudi researcher is arguing that the Prophet’s wife Ayesha was actually nineteen when she was married, instead of nine.
  • IslamOnline’s Amara Bamba looks at the French hejab ban on its four-year anniversary. Via TalkIslam.
  • Cycads gives her thoughts on the movie Four Women — One Man.
  • A look at two Iranian plays that protest polygamy. Via Azadeh Pourzand.
  • The Iranian government denies allegations that it’s discriminatory to women. Ohhhhhhhkay. More here.
  • This story is heart-breaking. May Allah protect these three sisters, both from their father and from a system that refuses to listen to them.
  • Al Jazeera looks at a family in the middle of Ireland’s hejab ban debate. The Irish Times reports about the group lobbying for the right to wear headscarves in schools and Ali Selim gives a pretty…uh…interesting opinion on Muslim women vs. non-Muslim women.
  • Former Bangladeshi Prime Minister Khaleda Zia has been granted bail. More from Al Jazeera.
  • MidEast Youth’s Jahanshah Rashidian outlines Iran’s gender segregation and its history.
  • MuslimMatters shares an interview with Dr. Aafia Siddiqui’s sister.
  • A Muslim woman claims that she has been fired from UPS because she wouldn’t “hike up her long skirt.”
  • More about Egyptian women speaking out about harassment.
  • Palestinian soap opera Matabb airs during Ramadan, and promises to be a thriller.
  • Self-immolation is on the rise among Afghan women.
  • The ruling that Dutch military forces are not liable for their failure to keep Bosnians doesn’t sit well with Bosnian mothers.
  • During Ramadan, Algerian mosques become places to find a husband or wife.
  • Al Jazeera shows one Iraqi refugee’s difficult journey to the U.S.
  • The Guardian examines whether Iraqi female suicide bombers are villains or victims and profiles Dr. Roshanak Wardak.
  • Shahed Amanullah argues that The Jewel of Medina is nothing for Muslims to fear. MuslimMatter’s AnonyMouse disagrees. Andrea Useem throws in her two cents for Slate. altmuslim’s interviews the author.
  • A Muslim woman is conducting a study that needs African American Muslim women to participate. Via DeenPort.
  • Ijtema profiles female calligrapher Ayten Tiryaki.
  • Two women go on a drunken tirade against two Muslim women in Leeds, Britain.
  • A movie about the woman who died after receiving a major beating opened at the Toronto Film Festival.
  • The Philadelphia Daily News reports on the Philadelphia Police Departments’ ban on religious symbols (including the headscarf) and one female Muslim officer’s appeal.
  • Local Chinese authorities have banned Muslim men from growing beards and Muslim women from wearing headscarves.
  • Morocco has sent female preachers to expatriate communities in the West.
  • After finishing an important exam, several girls in a Tanzanian school fainted.
  • GlobalVoices examines the way Saudi women use religion to empower themselves and gain standing within the community.
  • Nigerian women face societal pressure to get married.
  • A Muslim filmmaker needs your help for her next project. Via DeenPort.
  • Koonj writes about the single Muslim female. Via Ijtema.
  • Iraq’s Minister for Women’s Affairs urges the government to rehabilitate “would-be” female suicide bombers.
  • Lebanon’s Fadlallah urges women to become involved in politics.
  • Irfan Yusuf writes that violence against [Muslim] women won’t stop until men speak out.
  • The Nation interview’s KABOBfests’ May Alhassen.
  • Achelois outlines the history of covering one’s hair for prayer.
  • Sana Saeed writes about how Google ruined her life.
  • Organica and Subtopian Sunni Sister write personal reflections about 9/11.
  • The Washington Post has a few videos about hijab.

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