Displaying 1091 - 1100 of 1311.
A People’s Assembly member disavows the Muslim Brotherhood’s slogan and denies having perpetrated violations against Copts.
In a symposium at the Monastery of Badābā in Naj‘ Hammādī, the head of the Washington-based U.S. Copts Association, Michael Munīr, described the head of the St. Athanasius Orthodox Eparchy of Egypt and the Middle East, Bishop Max Michel, as an "outsider" who incited Christians to disobey Pope...
The Coptic writer Jamāl As‘ad criticizes the church’s creed affirmation conference and accuses it of being an attempt to affirm itself as a state.
Lectures stating that Christianity is coming to an end in most Middle Eastern countries which is strongly related to Western interference in the region.Media attention for AWR work.
The author examines the situation of Copts under Islamic rule. He states that the weight of this history makes it difficult for Egypt and other Arab countries to support the principles of tolerant liberalism.
The author discusses the prevalence of rumors in Egypt and how often the consequences of such rumors are more serious than their original cause. He notes the work of Drs. Hulsman in researching the factual events of claims of Christian persecution and Muslim outrage and in providing an electronic...
The author argues that the quota system for Egyptian Christians in parliamentary and state positions will not offer a good solution to the problem of religious fanaticism. The only way to address this is to stick to secularism and to belongingness to the nation, before religion.
The author complains about the absence of Coptic names from the list of students who gained the highest grades in the thānawīya ‘amma [Egyptian high school].
This article discusses the current crisis in Western Anglicanism and notes that a focus on this ignores the fact that the majority of Christians live in the rest of the world. The author asserts that the future of Christianity lies in the churches of the global South, not the West.
Following the al-Khankah sectarian incidents in November 1972, President al-Sādāt requested the formation of a fact-finding committee to investigate what happened. This report is the result of that committee and also includes recommendations for tackling the root causes of the tensions.

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