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Rachida Dati’s Rise and Fall


Posted by Krista Riley on 05 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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French politician Rachida Dati has been in and out of the headlines since taking office as France’s Minister of Justice.  MMW recently covered the hype around Dati’s pregnancy and her decision to return to work only five days after having a caesarian section.  Now, Dati is back in the news as we hear that she […]

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Sandeela Kanwal: “Honor Killing”, Race and Religion


Posted by faith on 04 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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NPR did a piece on the “honor killing” of Sandeela Kanwal on January 26, 2009. Kanwal was the daughter of Chaudry Rashid, a Pakistani immigrant who lives in a suburb of Atlanta. The police in Clayton County (where Kanwal and Rashid lived) say that Rashid killed his daughter because she wanted to divorce her husband and Rashid […]

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Apparently women aren’t part of the “big picture”


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 04 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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The Big Picture usually does an excellent job compiling a diverse set of photos. So it’s especially hard to believe that the blog couldn’t apply that diversity to the gender of its subjects. Women are in only four of 32 photos — that’s 12.5 percent. At the same time, there are multiple pictures of elephants and orangutans. And many, many photos of men. One would think that only men represent the world’s most populous Muslim country.

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Hope from Whom and for Whom? Palestine as a Muslim Cause


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 03 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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Israel’s war on the Palestinians may be over for now, but the conflict remains. About a week and a half ago, I received an email from a wonderful organization, Jewish Voice for Peace, asking me to sign onto a letter to President Obama asking him to create a just foreign policy regarding Israel and Palestine. […]

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Tin Women: Saatchi Gallery’s Newest Installation


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 02 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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The Saatchi Gallery’s latest exhibition Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East has received considerable media attention. Despite the overused term, the art is refreshingly original, featuring 19 artists, most of them in their twenties and thirties, from Iraq, Iran, Egypt, Tunisia, Lebanon, Syria and Algeria. Their art is raw, tender, vicious and vile. Think […]

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Friday Links — January 30, 2009


Posted by fatemeh on 30 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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Sweden’s Cherine Awad, one of the Halal TV hosts, may be Sweden’s first lawyer who wears a headscarf. Denmark has sentenced a mother for the female genital cutting of her daughters. More from the BBC. Via TalkIslam. Some Qatari women are insisting that clauses assuring them a separate home from their in-laws be included in […]

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From the Source: Muslimah Source Joins the Interwebs


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 28 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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Muslimah Source is a new site that is geared towards Muslim women. When I visited the site, I was hoping for something a little different from the norm. Usually sites catering to Muslim women have sections on relationships, health & beauty, motherhood, how to emulate female companions (sahabah) of the Prophet (saws) and dress (i.e. […]

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From the Outside Looking In: What Does Not Need Reporting


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 27 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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* Asian and South Asian will be used interchangeably to refer to those of Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, etc., origin. Earlier this month, BBC News ran two stories online on young Asian (read South Asian in North America) women, and both stories exposed our dirty laundry. Or at least that was the way they seemed. The […]

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Idealising Islamic womanhood, internalising whiteness


Posted by Guest Contributor on 27 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by Cycads, and originally appeared on her blog.   Malaysian actress Wardina The meteoric rise of Malaysian actress Wardina and singer Waheeda in the last few years was by no means an accident. For decades, women who wore the tudung (hijab) had longed for high-profile role models who shared their values […]

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Brick Lane: Open Thread


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 26 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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I watched Brick Lane last night. Full disclosure: I haven’t read the book. I wanted to, I swear. Just never got around to it. So I can’t offer book-versus-movie criticism, which doesn’t seem like such a big deal considering that everyone always says that “the book is better,” anyway. But I really enjoyed the movie. […]

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