Date of source: Monday, June 26, 2006
A
recent
survey on Islam-West relations has revealed deep misunderstanding and suspicions on both sides between the
Muslim world and the West, Makram Muhammad Ahmad says.
Date of source: Friday, June 30, 2006
The author reviews a book made by Egyptian famous intellectual Sa‘īd ‘Ashmāwī, in which he tackled the hijāb issue and other controversial issues related mainly to Muslims’ clothes.
Date of source: Wednesday, June 14, 2006
A recent workshop on the effect of religious truth on social harmony in Egypt and
Germany
was held in Lokkum, Germany. Sāmī Khashaba gives his point of view on the issue.
Date of source: Thursday, June 8, 2006
Ahmad Gharīb and Walīd ‘Urābī claim that Israel has started to propagate the beliefs of an Islamic sect called al-Jamā‘a al-Islāmīya al-Ahmadīya [Reviewer: The Ahmadī Islamic group], which they describe as a deviant Islamic group that knows nothing about Islam, in an attempt to distort the image of...
Date of source: Sunday, June 4, 2006
A controversial article on the growing Islamization of Egypt and the effect this has on the Coptic community.
Date of source: Sunday, June 4, 2006
Claims that Pakistani Christian children sold as slaves to fund Islamic militants and that the police have failed to take action, despite two Christian missionaries providing photographic evidence of children being sold.
Date of source: Saturday, June 3, 2006
Islamic movements, along with the climate of political and social tension, create extremism, violence and supporters of the Salafiya Jihadīya trends such as the Mansura, Tawhīd and Jihad groups.
Date of source: Sunday, May 28, 2006
Patrick Sookhdeo is the Director of the Institute for the Study of Islam and Christianity, a Christian research organization that specialises in the study of Christian minorities in Islamic states. Born in British Guyana, he converted from Islam to Christianity in his early 20s and now warns,...
Date of source: Saturday, May 20, 2006 to Friday, May 26, 2006
The article deals with the ideologies of a group of Muslims who call themselves "the Qur’ānites" who believe only in the Qur’ān and deny the sunna [the Prophet Muhammad’s tradition] altogether.
Date of source: Tuesday, May 23, 2006
The speech given by Lord Carey, former archbishop of Canterbury, at the opening of the second theological college in Alexandria.