• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Canadian Muslims

Books/Magazines

Book Review: Islam in the Hinterlands


Posted by Krista Riley on 27 Sep 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Islam in the Hinterlands: Muslim Cultural Politics in Canada is a recent book that looks at the place of Muslims within Canadian media, schools, politics, and laws.  Edited by Jasmin Zine, the collection provides insightful analysis on a number of current topics related to Muslims in Canada, and is a valuable resource for those of […]

Read more →

Book Review: Miroirs et Mirages by Monia Mazigh


Posted by Guest Contributor on 22 Mar 2012 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by Chelby Marie Daigle and originally published at The Woyingi Blog. Miroirs et mirages is the first novel by Tunisian Canadian Monia Mazigh, who is better known for her work as a human rights activist. Mazigh came to Canada in 1991 to study Finance in Montreal. She subsequently met and married her husband, […]

Read more →

Religious and Cultural Appropriation in the Newspaper and the Courtroom


Posted by diana on 21 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



On the morning of June 30, 2009 a quadruple-murder case rocked the city of Kingston in Ontario, Canada. Four women were found dead, submerged in the Rideau Canal, in their Nissan Sentra. At first it seemed as though boaters had come across a teenage prank gone awry or the victims of a horrific car accident. […]

Read more →

Won’t Someone Think of the Menstruating Children?


Posted by Guest Contributor on 14 Jul 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



By guest contributor Wood Turtle; a longer version of this post was originally published at her blog. At what point does religious inclusion become too much for a public school board to handle? Apparently, it’s when the menstrual cycles of 12-year-old girls become the center of public debate. Every week for the past three years, […]

Read more →

Right Answer, Wrong Reason: Why “Muslim” Is Not A Halloween Costume


Posted by Krista Riley on 03 Nov 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Just in time for Halloween, the Toronto Star‘s ethics columnist, Ken Gallinger (whose columns I enjoy), received a question from a parent: We are a Christian family. Our daughter, 7, goes to a school where there are many Muslim kids. Some of their moms walk them to school in burqas. My daughter is fascinated by these […]

Read more →

Niqab by Numbers: Quantifying the Overreactions


Posted by Krista Riley on 25 Mar 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



I am so, so sick of talking about the niqab.  So I’m not really going to, despite the fact that the Canadian province of Quebec recently introduced a bill that, if made law, would force everyone to show their face when dealing with provincial government bodies.  If anyone else has intelligent insight on recent Quebec-related […]

Read more →

Reading Religion and Canadian Identity: Sheema Khan’s Of Hockey and Hijab


Posted by Krista Riley on 11 Mar 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Of Hockey and Hijab: Reflections of a Canadian Muslim Woman, published last October, is a collection of monthly columns written by Sheema Khan and originally printed in Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper, between 2002 and 2009.  Khan, who founded the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-CAN), was born in India and moved to Montreal when […]

Read more →

Ask Me Anything: Conversations on Niqab


Posted by Krista Riley on 25 Nov 2009 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The new CBC weeknight show Connect with Mark Kelley recently aired a segment on niqab as part of its “Ask Me Anything” series, in which members of the public are given the chance to ask questions about the experiences and perspectives of a designated person.  Previous “Ask Me Anything” conversations have included a nurse who […]

Read more →

Milke-ing it: Another Paternalistic Editorial


Posted by faith on 12 Aug 2009 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Looking at the title of Mark Milke’s editorial, “The 21st century-style subjection of women” I have to admit that the first group of people that didn’t come to mind was Muslim women. Maybe it’s because Muslims are usually portrayed as being stuck in the middle ages. However, my first impression was wrong and the editorial […]

Read more →

“Honour Killings” and “Canadian Values”


Posted by Krista Riley on 27 Jul 2009 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Three family members have recently been charged in the deaths of three teenage sisters and a female relative.  The three girls–Zainab, Sahar, and Geeti Shafia–and their father’s first wife, Rona Mohammed, were found dead in a car that had been submerged in the Rideau Canal.  Innaa lillahi wa innaa ilayhi raaji`oun (to God we belong […]

Read more →
12