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Breaking Down Stereotypes: Somali Women Always Agents of History


Posted by sharrae on 19 Jun 2013 / 0 Comments
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Recently, the Huffington Post re-published an Associated Press article on Sufi resurgence in Somalia. Following the withdrawal of the armed militant group Al-Shabab from the country’s capital of Mogadishu, Somalis are once again allowed to engage in Sufi practices without fear of death and violent repression. The article paints a landscape of men and women […]

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Hijab and the Boston Bombers


Posted by nicolejhm on 24 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
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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, […]

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A Clash of Principles: Examining the Niqab in Canadian Courts


Posted by Guest Contributor on 09 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Maria Salman. In 1992, a young woman gathers the courage to pen a deeply personal journal entry for a teacher. She finally breaks the silence over an earth-shattering secret that she is the survivor of childhood sexual abuse committed against her by two male family members. Fast forward […]

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Rise of the Niqabi Criminal: Balaclavas, Burkas and Bank Robberies


Posted by anike on 04 Mar 2013 / 0 Comments
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On December 30 of last year, someone wearing a niqab threw acid in the face of 20 year old Victoria’s Secret shop assistant, Naomi Oni as she returned home after a late shift work one night. As Naomi Oni approached the flat she shared with her mother in Dagenham, East London, she caught a glimpse […]

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News

Malala and the Media: Not Black and White


Posted by Guest Contributor on 27 Feb 2013 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Ossob. Looking back at recent media attention on Muslim women, the story of Malala Yousafzai stands out because it simultaneously inspired and frustrated me. A young Muslim woman had captured the attention of the global media for, it would appear, all the right reasons. Malala Yousafzai, the bright […]

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The Media and the Headscarf: Kosovo Public Schools Edition (not the final episode)


Posted by Guest Contributor on 21 Feb 2013 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Asifa Akbar. In the last couple of weeks, reports have surfaced about Kosovo’s supposed ban on the wearing of the headscarf (hijab) by Muslim girls in its public schools. Such reports were reposted on social media and influential blogs; for example, already over 900 people have recommended an […]

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Responding to Hijab “Costume”


Posted by azra on 14 Feb 2013 / 0 Comments
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Last week, several major news outlets in Minnesota reported St. Paul police officers dressed as Somali women wearing hijab (I’ve included links here from Minnesota Public Radio; the stories also received coverage in local newspapers The Star Tribune and St. Paul Pioneer Press). Pictures of the police officers were found on Twitter and initiated a […]

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Muslim Women, Not-So-Muslim Men: Interfaith Marriage in the UK


Posted by sana on 14 Jan 2013 / 13 Comments
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Since apparently all of us over the ripe age of 20 walk around with visible and obnoxiously loud ticking analog biological clocks, it’s no surprise that the issue of marriage is constantly smacked into our faces as though it is the sole defining moment and relationship of our lives. Marriage for Muslim women, whatever shade […]

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Reading Between the Lines: Two Takes on British Women’s Unemployment


Posted by azra on 02 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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Earlier in December, the Guardian reported on a recent UK-based report—the “All Party Parliamentary Group on Race and Community Ethnic Minority Female Unemployment: Black, Pakistani and Bangladeshi Heritage Women”—that found “minority ethnic women are more than twice as likely to be unemployed as their white counterparts, with some removing their hijabs or making their names […]

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It’s Almost 2013 and Yet We Still Have to Write About This Stuff


Posted by nicole on 19 Dec 2012 / 0 Comments
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I do feel a twinge of guilt at the hipster irony of being the white girl here (there’s a joke somewhere I am sure) but can we talk about this article from The Telegraph?  With the title “The Unique Advantage of Female War Reporters in Muslim Countries,” we are treated to the special version of […]

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