Displaying 71 - 80 of 233.
In a response to the disturbances in Alexandria, a number of Christian youth and intellectuals have decided to hoist a flag to represent the Christians in Egypt.
The author slams Arab officials’ position regarding the region’s critical issues, asserting that those who are responsible for working for the good of Arabs are working for themselves only.
The author is commenting on the two messages published by Rose al-Yousuf magazine in response to his earlier article about the expatriate Copts and their efforts to internationalize the issues of Egypt’s Copts.
This Coptic author Salīm Najīb, the head of the Canadian Coptic Organization, is criticizing the article by Muslim journalist Usāma Salāma, which he says was filled with anti-Coptic threats and warnings against the bids to internationalize issues of Copts in Egypt.
The article emphasizes Copts’ patriotism, arguing that Copts in Egypt are never involved with the practices of expatriate Copts.
The article discusses the attempts of expatriate Copts to internationalize Egyptian Christians’ issues and the reverberations of these attempts on the situation at home on relations between Muslims and Christians in Egypt.
A discussion of sectarian violence in Egypt at the Andalusia Centre for Studies on Reconciliation and Combating Violence and the Development of Democracy Group.
Hānī Labīb rejects the idea of internationalizing the problems of Copts in Egypt, believing that the only way out of such problems is through implanting the concept of citizenship between both Christians and Muslims.
Usāma Salāma argues that discussion of the Coptic file in the International Committee on Human Rights at the UN, may lead to harmful acts against Copts who still live inside Egypt.
The issue of international interference in Egypt on behalf of the Copts is highly controversial, and the author argues that Egyptian distress, not only Coptic distress should be internationalized.

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