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Egypt

The Sad Stories of Muslim Women in Pictures


Posted by eren on 09 Jun 2014 / 0 Comments
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My dad has been an avid photographer since I can remember. As a kid I was constantly photographed with a traditional analog camera and black and white film. As a teenager, it was my dad’s passion that led me to learn professional photography through vocational education. Photographs, my dad used to tell me, are a […]

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Film

Documenting Egypt’s Revolution: Al-Midan (The Square) Reviewed


Posted by azra on 26 Feb 2014 / 0 Comments
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Jehane Noujaim’s recent film, Al-Midan (translation: The Square), follows a group of Egyptian activists—many who are filmmakers and photographers themselves— involved in their nation’s ever-changing revolution(s) over the past couple of years. The film is beautifully shot, as Noujaim both follows the activists’ lives and has them describe their hopes for freedom and change as […]

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Culture/Society

The “Story” of Suha Omar Ali


Posted by tasnim on 29 Oct 2013 / 0 Comments
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“I can’t follow the news anymore, it’s too much.” Over the last two years, I’ve heard this sentence over and over again from friends and family who no longer live their lives to the soundtrack of Arab satellite channels, from local variants like Libya Al-Ahrar to the pan-Arab channels Al-Arabiya and Al-Jazeera. It has become […]

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Culture/Society

Double Standards on Public Decency


Posted by yasmeen on 17 Oct 2013 / 1 Comment
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My cousin’s daughter is smart. She recently summed a deeply rooted societal problem in few words. The little girl is relatively chubby and her mom, my cousin, keeps giving her remarks on her weight and looks. At one point, she responded: “Don’t you see that you are fat too! Plus, you are the one who […]

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Culture/Society

The H Word: A Piece of Cloth Loaded with More Than It Can Bear?


Posted by yasmeen on 12 Sep 2013 / 2 Comments
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I have to admit that hijab narratives in media turn me off. Whether because it is exhaustively discussed or because most of these narratives rely heavily on clichés and fallacies, hijab is a subject that seems to me overloaded with notions that are not related in any way to what I see as the core […]

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Women’s Involvement Is Nothing New


Posted by yasmeen on 22 Aug 2013 / 2 Comments
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When you google the possible variations of these words: Women, Role & Arab Spring, you will be faced with massive numbers of articles, studies and interviews that examine thoroughly women’s involvement in the Arab Spring. The prevalent sentiment of such works revolves around how it’s newsworthy that “Women played an active role during the Arab […]

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Ramadan 2013

Ramadan Resolutions, Revolving Revolutions: In One Year, Out the Other


Posted by tasnim on 18 Jul 2013 / 0 Comments
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A couple of years ago, I heard a story about an Egyptian woman who decided that she would cook the Ramadan favourites she usually cooked for iftar, but she and her family would not eat the meals she prepared. Instead, the food was distributed among the poor and they broke their fast on flat bread […]

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Ramadan 2013

9 Things That Make Ramadan Memories Special to Me


Posted by yasmeen on 10 Jul 2013 / 0 Comments
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Ramadan is here! And although its true essence is all about our pursuit of spiritual elevation, we – Muslims – celebrate it in every way possible. Thus, special memories about Ramadan are engraved in our hearts, and I would like to share some of mine here. 1. I was born in Ramadan: When I was […]

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Empowered Women in the Age of the Harem


Posted by yasmeen on 17 Jun 2013 / 2 Comments
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“Backwards” is the word often associated with pre-modern ages, and “oppression” is the word that comes to our minds first when we describe the state of women during those ages. Thank God we live in the modern age where human rights activism has brought women rights that they’ve never had before. Right? Sorry to shake […]

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Muslim Women and Graffiti: Taking Art, Politics and Gender to the Streets


Posted by eren on 30 May 2013 / 0 Comments
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When I was a teenager, my dad and I used to enjoy looking at the graffiti painted all over Mexico City. While my dad was a critic of the graffiti that was just scribbles and swear words and obscene signs, we enjoyed those graffitos that were not only truly artistic but also political. Graffiti was, […]

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