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“Alice in Arabia” Sounds Like a New Drama That’s Going to Tell the Same Mind-Numbing Story


Posted by sarayasin on 20 Mar 2014 / 0 Comments
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Cross-posted from Tumblr. We don’t know much about ABC Family’s new drama, “Alice in Arabia”, but I already have a feeling that it’s going to be pretty terrible. The network, which targets a younger crowd, has ordered three drama pilots, and one of them follows the story of a “rebellious American teenage girl who, after tragedy […]

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The Snore Heard ‘Round the World


Posted by nicolejhm on 14 Nov 2013 / 7 Comments
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A few days ago, my Facebook newsfeed was awash with people sharing articles about a new billboard that just went up in Los Angeles. It depicts a male American soldier embracing a woman wearing a niqab. The billboard is for a product called SnoreStop, and it also displays the hashtag #betogether. Um…okay. Despite the buzz, […]

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Cinema

“Torn”: A Tale of Tolerance and Doubt


Posted by samya on 14 Oct 2013 / 0 Comments
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After reading the synopsis of Torn , a film written by Michael Richter and directed by Jeremiah Birnbaum, I thought: Oooh, this might be yet another film on the post 9/11 era, blaming the Muslim community for all evil things that happened, and echoing  all sorts of stereotypes that have defined America’s perceptions of Muslims […]

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An Interview with “Haldol and Hyacinths” author Melody Moezzi


Posted by azra on 20 Aug 2013 / 0 Comments
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I recently read Melody Moezzi’s new memoir, Haldol and Hyacinths: A Bipolar Life. In the book, Moezzi bravely portrays her diagnosis with bipolar disorder, focusing briefly before her mental illness is diagnosed through to a point when she receives an accurate diagnosis and treatment. While much of the book hauntingly illustrates the incredible highs and […]

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Ramadan 2013

A Tale of Two Ramadans


Posted by emaan on 15 Jul 2013 / 3 Comments
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My grandmother set down a plate of six or seven parathas with determination in her eyes, as though warning us we had no choice but to finish all of them. From the kitchen, pots and pans clacked as our cook constructed omelet after omelet at a pace that could, conceivably, break the sound barrier. My […]

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The Cracking Façade of Tradition and Patriarchy


Posted by Guest Contributor on 17 Apr 2013 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Yasmin N. Ali. I was seventeen years old when I first encountered, in full force, the hierarchies that are often built into many Muslim communities.  Back then, I was fighting to make my debate team coed so I’d get one more year of experience before I graduated high […]

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Responding to Hijab “Costume”


Posted by azra on 14 Feb 2013 / 0 Comments
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Last week, several major news outlets in Minnesota reported St. Paul police officers dressed as Somali women wearing hijab (I’ve included links here from Minnesota Public Radio; the stories also received coverage in local newspapers The Star Tribune and St. Paul Pioneer Press). Pictures of the police officers were found on Twitter and initiated a […]

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Books/Magazines

Book Review: Sophia Al-Maria’s “The Girl Who Fell To Earth”


Posted by tasnim on 29 Jan 2013 / 0 Comments
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The Girl who Fell to Earth is the coming-of-age story of a self-described “Qatarican” (Qatari/American) which takes the reader on a zig-zagging journey from a farm in Washington State to a Bedouin town in Qatar, and on to a houseboat on the Nile and the hustle and bustle of Cairo. The result is something very […]

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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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Roundtable

MMW Eid Roundtable: Part 2


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 31 Oct 2012 / 0 Comments
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As you know, last Friday was Eid-ul-Adha, a major holiday for Muslims around the world.  Having enjoyed sharing our Ramadan experiences with our readers earlier this year, the MMW team wanted to briefly share some experiences and reflections on this Eid, focusing especially on the role of gender in how Eid is experienced in our […]

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