Religion News on the Web
Selected religion-related news from around the Web
July 30, 2012
- Newsweek
Newsweek: Women rise up in Saudi Arabia: The rebellion behind the veil
A remarkable thing happened this past May in Riyadh. Officers belonging to Saudi Arabia’s ever-zealous religious police, the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, ordered an abaya-clad young woman out of a shopping mall for wearing nail polish.
July 29, 2012
- Los Angeles Times
LAT: Egypt unnerved by rising religious fervor
An engineering student is killed for walking with his fiancee by men reportedly linked to a group called the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.
July 24, 2012
- The New York Times
NYT: Al Qaeda taking deadly new role in Syria conflict
It is the sort of image that has become a staple of the Syrian revolution, a video of masked men calling themselves the Free Syrian Army and brandishing AK-47s -- with one unsettling difference.
July 23, 2012
- The Wall Street Journal
WSJ: Syrian conflict draws in Christians
Syria's conflict, increasingly characterized as a Muslim sectarian war, is now also threatening to engulf the country's estimated two million Christians.
July 19, 2012
- The Associated Press
AP: Hezbollah squeezed by Syria uprising, Sunni ascendency across region`
On a main road connecting the Lebanese capital with the south, Sheik Ahmad Assir kneels under a blazing sun to pray and then sits down with supporters at his anti-Hezbollah protest camp and launches into a new tirade against Lebanon's most powerful and well-armed force.
July 05, 2012
- The New York Times
NYT: Israeli identity is at the heart of a debate on service
On one level, the questions shaking the Israeli political system this week are pragmatic: how many ultra-Orthodox men and Arab citizens should be drafted into the military or national service, over how many years and how should those who resist be penalized?
July 03, 2012
- The Associated Press
AP: Saudi female athletes fear crackdown after London
While Olympic leaders and human rights advocates are encouraged by signs that Saudi Arabia may bow to pressure and send female athletes to the Summer Games, women athletes in the ultraconservative kingdom are worried about a backlash at home.
June 24, 2012
- The Washington Post
Wash. Post: Mohamed Morsi named new Egyptian president
Egyptians picked a conservative Islamist as their first freely elected president, officials announced Sunday, giving the Muslim Brotherhood a platform to challenge entrenched military authority and electrifying the Arab world’s most populous nation with one of the most concrete signs of democratic change since the revolution last year.