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Libya’s Girl Executioners and Gun-Brandishing Newscasters


Posted by tasnim on 06 Sep 2011 / 0 Comments
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Nisreen Mansour al Forgani, centre, with fellow Gaddafi female militia members. She is now under armed rebel guard in a Tripoli hospital. Picture: AFP Gender roles are nowhere more prominent than in war, as we see male political and military leaders taking the most visible roles in armed conflicts, promoting the tendency to see the […]

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Google Doodle Celebrates Nazik al-Malaika


Posted by tasnim on 23 Aug 2011 / 0 Comments
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This is an edited version of the post that originall appeared at Tasnim’s blog.   Google’s doodle today celebrates Nazik al-Malaika, on the occasion of the 88th anniversary of her birthday. The famous Iraqi poet is known as one of the first Arabic poets to use free verse. As Salih J. Altoma puts it: Nazik al-Mala’ika occupies a prominent […]

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Ahdaf Soueif’s Mezzaterra: Fiction or Reality?


Posted by tasnim on 03 Aug 2011 / 0 Comments
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Ahdaf Soueif’s novel The Map of Love, published in 1999, tells the history of Egypt through two parallel plots, set at the beginning and at the end of the 20th century. During a conversation with Egyptian intellectuals, one of the characters argues, familiarly, that: we live by slogans. We take comfort in them: the great […]

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The Mohawk Hijab and the Chanel Abaya


Posted by tasnim on 04 Jul 2011 / 0 Comments
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Kecya Felix, a Brazilian stylist/designer, wore a fake Chanel niqab and abaya and an iPad around her neck which played “Could Coco Chanel Create This Look?” at Sao Paulo Fashion Week. Kecya Felix wearing the abaya. As this article puts it, Felix intended to “make a statement” through the performance, wearing ”a fake Chanel Muslim garment” and, […]

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The Symbol of Eman al-Obeidi


Posted by tasnim on 04 Apr 2011 / 0 Comments
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On March 26, Eman al-Obeidi burst into the Rixos Hotel in Tripoli and told reporters that fifteen of Gaddafi’s militiamen had detained her for two days and raped her. She named one of them as the son of a high-ranking official, and pleaded for her friends, who she said were still held captive. After a […]

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“Libyamazons” and the Libyan Uprising


Posted by tasnim on 14 Mar 2011 / 0 Comments
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Moammar Gaddafi’s outlandish behavior has long been a gift to comedians. Making fun of the Colonel clearly does not require much effort: all the news channel Al Arabiya had to do for their segment Gharaib Al Gaddafi (Gaddafi’s Oddities) was put together a montage of clips of the Brother Leader and his fern fly-swatter. One […]

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Women’s Voices in the Revolutions Sweeping the Middle East


Posted by tasnim on 21 Feb 2011 / 0 Comments
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Google executive Wael Ghonim became one of the faces of the Egyptian revolution through the Facebook page “We are all Khalid Said,” which was a vital spark to the revolution. But another important spark was a video posted by 26-year-old Asmaa Mahfouz from the April 6 Youth Movement, where she declared that she was going […]

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Semra Çelebi’s Double Trouble with Hijab


Posted by tasnim on 24 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
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Semra Çelebi’s Facebook page “I took off my hijab” shares her decision to remove her headscarf after 16 years of wearing the hijab. According to Çelebi, the page was created “to gather stories and experiences of all those women around the world who stepped out of their traditional social environment and chose to live their […]

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Women in Tunisia’s Revolution


Posted by tasnim on 17 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
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On Friday, the President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia fled his homeland as it was engulfed by an uprising, sparked by the suicide of Mohamed Bouazizi, an unemployed university graduate who had taken to selling fruit in Sidi Bouzid.  When authorities confiscated his wares for not having a license, Bouazizi set himself on fire in front […]

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Black Polyester: Nuance and Niqab?


Posted by tasnim on 27 Oct 2010 / 0 Comments
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“I wanted to own the article of clothing that was being talked about,” Jonas Otterbeck says, explaining his reasons for buying a niqab. Otterbeck, who teaches Islamic Studies at Lund University in Sweden, spoke of his view on the niqab on the documentary Black Polyester, the sixth in a sixteen part series broadcast on SVT1 […]

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