Displaying 161 - 170 of 419.
Dr. Wā’il ‘Aziz comments on the importance of ijtihād and the benefit of having different fatwás on certain topics.
Muhammad ‘Alī Ibrahīm tells the story of the Wilmot Camp in America.
The article highlights the special features of the Islamic caliphate, showing its main characteristics and how it is distinguished from other forms of rule.
The author attacks Sudanese thinker Hasan al-Turābī, describing him as a failed Sunnī version of al-Khūmaynī. He says that his thoughts are contradicted and twisted.
In an interview with a senior official from the Azhar, the author asks about the education system and whether there had been any attempts to ‘westernize’ it.
The author examines the foundations of all religions and affirms that they are one, despite their differences. Bahā’ī sm meets these criteria and therefore can be termed a religion.
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.
Scholars inside the Azhar are split over a project proposed by a businessman to have a stock exchange dealing in currency, a system of economic activity that is new in Egypt and Arab and Islamic countries, amidst arguments as to whether the proposal runs counter to the sharī‘a.
Muslim scholars as well as the public follow the teachings of al- Salaf whether right or wrong without thinking - even if they are inconsistent with their interests or contradict with the Qur’ān and the Sunna which led to a mental inertia and moral corruption.
The article praises a court ruling repealing a previous ruling that gave Egypt’s nearly 1000 Bahā’īs the right to have their faith registered in official documents, with opinions by intellectuals that Bahā’ism is not a religion and that the only religions recognized in Egypt are the divine...

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