Displaying 31 - 40 of 48.
The author continues to comment on how applying Western secularism and modernism could be harmful to Islam, as it has corrupted Christian religion and ethics in Europe. He makes it clear that those who support Western modernism are not entitled to dictate the Islamic nation a new religion discourse...
The author continues publishing the response he received from Talat Gad Allah, which in its turn was written in response to an article by the author. Gad Allah explained that there is a big difference between persecution and political marginalization, which bans practices of political rights and...
The article is a response to a letter sent to the author by Talaat Gad Allah, a Coptic writer and a member of the Wafd Party, in which he commented on an article by the author titled “Abdel Nasser and the persecution of Copts”. The author provides information to prove his opinion that the 1952...
Coptic members of the Wafd Party are dissatisfied at the fact that Sayyed Al-Badawi, a Muslim member, was appointed as a general secretary of the party succeeding Christian member Saad Fakhry Abdel-Nour who passed away.
In the past, opposition parties rejected the participation of the Muslim Brotherhood in the political process, but now they are falling over themselves to gain the support of the outlawed group.
In a previous Rose al-Yousuf article [See AWR 2006, 5, art. 59], Tal‘at Jād Allāh discussed the position of women in the Egyptian political life and lamented their poor representation in parliament. In another Rose al-Yousuf article [See AWR 2006, 4, art. 43], he wrote that people’s choices in the...
Tal‘at Jād Allāh highlights the position of women in the Egyptian political life, arguing that in Egyptian man-dominated society, women are deprived of many of their citizenship rights.
Tal‘at Jād Allāh discusses the recent parliamentary elections, stating that people’s choices were based on a either a religious element, not one of citizenship and efficiency, or on the highest pay offered by vote-buying candidates.
A large category of Egyptian society, the Copts, is not represented in parliament, which is embarrassing for Egypt as a whole.
Many people believe that Muslim Brotherhood, after winning an unprecedented number of seats in the recent parliamentary elections, will go on to establish a religious state or the neo-Islamic Caliphate in Egypt has been its dream since it first saw the light of day.

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