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Hijab: A Muslim Woman’s only Achievement?


Posted by eren on 19 Jul 2012 / 0 Comments
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As a person who interacts with a Western Muslim community that places great importance in women’s clothing and female modesty, I am rarely surprised by the focus on hijab as the sign of piety. Similarly, I have unfortunately gotten used to the obsession in some Western media with hijabs and black robes as symbols of […]

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Saudi Women’s Right to Kick Balls


Posted by sana on 05 Jul 2012 / 0 Comments
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With the summer Olympics fast approaching (and truly, what place says summer better than London), it was only natural that a bit of controversy would have to preface an event upon which the integrity of your otherwise boring country lies. And who better to offer this controversy than Saudi Arabia? Earlier this year, Human Rights […]

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Revolution and Resistance in Egypt and Syria


Posted by sharrae on 02 Jul 2012 / 0 Comments
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Revolution never arrives without its victims. The lives it changes and swallows within its jaws are the same lives who endured decades of violence, decadence, and impoverishment by the very systems that it wishes to replace. The revolutions in the Middle East deeply reflect the contradictions between the joy and pride of toppling a dictatorship […]

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News

The “Muslim Kristallnacht” and a Swiss Twittergate


Posted by nicole on 27 Jun 2012 / 1 Comment
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One of the more colorful Muslim figures in Switzerland making the media rounds the past few months is Aziz Osmanoglu of Basel, who was recently on trial for hate speech charges.  The court case was based on Osmanoglu’s statements made to a Swiss TV show, which essentially added up to saying that it was “Sharia-compliant” […]

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


Posted by merium on 12 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
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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 […]

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Culture/Society

Yet Another Sensationalist Story about Muslim Girls and Swimming Lessons


Posted by nicole on 06 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
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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 […]

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News

Zarifa Qazizadah: Afghan Supergran


Posted by safiyaoutlines on 05 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
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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 […]

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News

Stop Using Us: Women’s Votes in the Egyptian Presidential Elections


Posted by emanhashim on 04 Jun 2012 / 0 Comments
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During the Egyptian elections campaigning, women were, of course, targeted by those looking for votes. Akher Kalam – “Final Words” – is one of the most viewed TV talk shows in Egypt.  As with most Egyptian media outlets lately, it has been paying much attention to the elections, and its coverage of women’s issues in […]

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


Posted by merium on 30 May 2012 / 0 Comments
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A group of nine men of Pakistani and Afghan origin were sentenced to jail recently for using alcohol and drugs to “groom” white British girls for sex.  The abuse took place in the town of Rochdale, near Manchester in northwest England.  The men, aged 24 to 38, were employed as taxi drivers, and included a […]

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Change Is Now? No, Not Yet: Manuel Valls as France’s New Interior Minister


Posted by nicole on 22 May 2012 / 0 Comments
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I was rather excited about Francois Hollande winning the French elections this month.  I hoped that five years of hateful, fear mongering policy towards Muslims by Sarkozy and his minions would come to an end and that Hollande, for all his supposed blandness, would bring some low-key normalcy to the French presidency. There was one […]

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