• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

A Family Affair: Afshan Azad’s Assault


Posted by sarayasin on 14 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



When I watched Afshan Azad entering the Yule Ball as Padma Patil with Ron Weasley in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, I did not even think about whether or not she was a Muslim. Instead, like many Potter fans, I was thinking about Hermione, and how the two of them really just needed […]

Read more →

An Open Letter to Maureen Dowd


Posted by sarahaji on 13 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Dear Maureen, I hear you’re back from your jaunt over in Saudi Arabia. Kudos to you for making it back from that big, bad place. Somebody get this woman the gin and tonic she deserves! First, a secret: I am so tired of frothy, pop-culture media and art about the question of veiling. It’s really […]

Read more →

Yasmeen Maxamuud’s Nomad Diaries


Posted by azra on 12 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



In Yasmeen Maxamuud’s novel, Nomad Diaries, Maxamuud tells the story of an upper-class Somali woman, Nadifo, who comes to Minneapolis as a refugee in the mid-1990s during a time of civil unrest in Somalia. Maxamuud highlights the challenges Somali women face as they transition to life in America as the story follows Nadifo and her family’s […]

Read more →

Friday Links — July 9, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 09 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The Arab Times interviews Dr. Naif Mohammed Al-Ajmy about the “phenomenon” of divorce in Kuwait. Hillary Clinton’s longtime aide Huma Abedin is marrying Representative Anthony Weiner. A council in Britain has been slammed for blacking out the windows of a glass-paneled swimming pool in order to protect the modesty of Muslim women. The Express Tribune […]

Read more →

Unveil FAIL: The Backlash Against Fariba Davoodi, Part II


Posted by Guest Contributor on 08 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by Sara Khorshid Doost. You can read Part I here. The reactions to Davoodi’s “de-jabbing” have not been as much as you’d expect. There are the usual suspects, those who praise Davoodi for the courage to free herself from the chains of the veil, some while expressing their general dislike for […]

Read more →

Unveil FAIL: The Backlash Against Fariba Davoodi, Part I


Posted by Guest Contributor on 07 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by Sara Khorshid Doost. Fariba Davoodi Mohajer is an Iranian women’s rights activist. She moved to the United States a few years ago after things got tough for her in Iran. Recently, she has decided to no longer wear hijab. Most notable among Iranian media reactions is a surprising interview with […]

Read more →

Missionary Rhetoric: A Cry of Need from Lands of Darkness


Posted by tasnim on 06 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



When Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaid’s Tale, a feminist dystopia set in a world run by a totalitarian theocracy, she said that she hadn’t “invented anything,” but taken her inspiration from fundamentalist Christianity in the United States, and the Islamic Revolution in Iran, among other things. In the context of the war on Afghanistan, Mary […]

Read more →

On the Radio: Nisaa FM


Posted by diana on 05 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This June, one of the first all-women radio stations in the Arab world was launched from the most unlikely of places, the West Bank. Appropriately titled NISAA FM, (nisaa means “woman” in Arabic) this station is by women, for women. Maysoun Odeh, founder and manager of NISAA FM, describes the aims of the station: “NISAA […]

Read more →

New MMW Contributor!


Posted by sarahaji on 03 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Salam, everyone! My name is Sara, and I’m a recent graduate of The University of Texas at Austin. My family is of Indian descent, but my parents and grandparents all lived and grew up largely in East Africa, and I was born in Toronto, Canada. I lived in the Ivory Coast for a few years […]

Read more →

Friday Links — July 2, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 02 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Afshan Azad’s father and brother have been charged with attempting to murder her. The Independent profiles Muslim fashion designers. Syria bans school teachers from wearing niqab in the classroom. CNN examines fashion at a Malaysian Qur’an reading competition. A Nigerian Muslim women’s group has said that the political environment in the country is not conducive […]

Read more →
« First‹ Previous132133134135136137138139140Next ›Last »
  • 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

    Powered by Authors Widget
  • Archives

  • Categories