Displaying 1 - 10 of 47.
Recently published by the Dār al-Battāna Publication House are two books of the Egyptian thinker and writer Dr. Khālid Muntaṣir.  The two books titled ‘Lakum Salafkum wa Lī Salafī’ (You have your own predecessors and I have mines), and the second book ‘Al-Khitān wa al-ʿUnf ḍid akl-Marʾah (‘Female...
Tomorrow (Tuesday) marks the first day of the Dutch Coptic Organization’s Annual Conference, in the Dutch capital of Amsterdam. The conference is titled “Modern Egypt Under the Shadow of the Contempt of Religions Law.” The conference will be attended by a selection of thinkers and...
Minister of Culture Ḥilmī al-Namnam expressed his happiness for attending the discussion of the book al-Ṭarīq ilā dāʿish [The Road to ISIS] in the Rose al-Yūsuf Foundation, one of the beacons of freedom [of expression].
(Right) now all the political groups in Egypt conform to one main principle, which is to make sure that every part of society is represented in the constituent assembly that will draft the Egyptian constitution. There is no doubt that this principle is credible as long as it is implemented...
On a program screened on Egyptian TV, Shaykh Khālid al-Jindī has threatened to slaughter the author for opposing his controversial fatwás.
Dr. Muntasir tackles the launch of Khalīd al-Jindy as the formal dā‘iyah of the state through the famous TV program al-Bit Bītak [Feel free] and criticizes him for his statement about Jamāl al-Bannā and defends the latter as a part of his rejection to denying the other’s right to have different...
Dr. Khālid Muntasir reviews a novel authored by the Saudi writer Shams al-Muqrin entitled, ’Nisā’ al-Munkar’ [Women of Enormity].
Khālid Muntaṣir, the author, reviews a Khayrī Shalabī novel entitled, ‘Quddās al-Shaykh Radwān’ [Mass of Shaykh Raḍwān] which deals with the relations between Muslims and Christians in Egypt.
The author discusses religious men and the sensitivity and intolerance that control the relationship between Muslims and Christians, and differentiates between Islam and Muslims and between Christianity and Christians.
A Pakistani Fatwá regards the vaccination against polio as Ḥarām because it was discovered by two American Jewish scientists who, according to the Fatwá, created the vaccination in order to negatively impact the potency of Muslims.

Pages

Subscribe to