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“Islamically dressed” sex workers in a Christian nation


Posted by anike on 15 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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I was personally not aware that Malawi had a somewhat significant Muslim population when I read this report by Nyasa Times discussing the trend of sex workers wearing the hijab in certain cities in Malawi. This is because I was aware that Malawi identifies itself as a Christian nation “with no religious conflict”, with the […]

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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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Friday Links | January 11, 2013


Posted by anneke on 11 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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Sri Lankan Rizana Nafeek has been beheaded last week in Saudi Arabia, for allegedly killing the baby of her employer. Her family is hoping to obtain her remains, so that she can have a proper burial. May Allah grant her eternal peace and justice. IPS features an article on the many struggles that Yemeni women […]

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Culture/Society

Sania Mirza: A Pride or Disgrace to Indian Muslims


Posted by izzie on 10 Jan 2013 / 1 Comment
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Sania Mirza is a source of pride in India. She is the first Indian woman to: Win a WTA (Women’s Tennis Association) tour title of any kind Win a Grandslam Title Surpass US $1m in career earnings She has also won the Arjuna Award, which is the highest sports honour in India, and the Padma […]

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Books/Magazines

Book Review: Gardens of Water


Posted by Guest Contributor on 08 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Rahela Choudhury, and contains spoilers about the book.  Alan Drew’s Gardens of Water focuses on how two families become forever intertwined after a devastating earthquake wreaks havoc upon their lives. The story takes place in a Turkish town on the outskirts of Istanbul. The two main families in […]

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Culture/Society

Malaysian Child Brides: Agency or Abuse?


Posted by syahirah on 07 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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This year saw two publicised instances of Malay Muslim girls in Malaysia, below the legal age of marriage, getting married to boys who were also relatively young. One couple was Nor Fazira Saad (13 years old) and Mohammad Fahmi Alias (19) from Kedah, Malaysia who were married in their kampong in November. Earlier this year in July, a […]

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Friday Links | January 4, 2013


Posted by anneke on 04 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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An increasing number of Muslim women in the UK is entering into a marriage with a non-Muslim partner, and some religious leaders are willing to conduct these interfaith marriages, despite the dominant notion that Muslim women are forbidden to marry non-Muslim partners. Institutions in Kosovo are addressing the status of survivors of sexual violence during […]

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Culture/Society

Not All Designations Are Equal: Representing Women in the Arab Revolutions and Beyond


Posted by sana on 03 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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Two years ago, Mohammad Bouazizi’s self-immolation set an inferno across parts of the Middle East and North Africa, changing the course of the region’s assumed history. We know what happened and we know what has been happening since. Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, despite having removed the bodies of dictators, continue to struggle to maintain control […]

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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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Film

Nur Media’s “Ask A Muslim” Series: Black Muslims Talk Islam


Posted by sharrae on 01 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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Finding black Muslim women in mainstream media circuits can be like finding a needle in a haystack. Most of the representations of Muslim people are confined to Arab and South Asian people, which are both the faults of mainstream producers and Muslim-owned media makers. However, it leaves other communities within the broader Muslim community to […]

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