pewforum.org Religion News on the Web

Religion News on the Web

Selected religion-related news from around the Web
Miami Herald: Spiritual journeys
In troubled times, many people turn to their faith, which may explain why faith-based travel has been gaining momentum in recent years.
Reuters: RPT-Militant S. Africa union marches with Bible, witchcraft
Its leaders call themselves devout Christians and say life is sacred. But its supporters march with spears, machetes and clubs and anoint themselves with magic potions to ward off police bullets.
RNS: Jews, Sikhs, Hindus root for fellow believers in Olympics
Americans cheered when Aly Raisman of Needham, Mass., won a gold medal on Tuesday (July 31) in the women's all-around gymnastics competition, but at least some American Jews likely cheered a little louder.
AP: Sect attack claim complicates Nigeria crisis
Christians and Muslims have clashed for years in central Nigeria, a conflict that took an unexpected turn when Islamist insurgents based in the northeast claimed responsibility for deadly weekend raids on Christian villages.
CS Monitor: After attacks, Kenyan Muslims guard Christian churches
In Kenya, attacks on Christian churches in the Muslim-majority town of Garissa killed 17 people July 1. Now, local Muslim leaders are patrolling to help protect the churches.
NYT: Mali Islamists exert control, attacking door to a mosque
Islamists who have taken control of one of Africa's most historic cities, Timbuktu, smashed the wooden door of an old mosque on Monday, continuing a campaign of destruction of religious monuments that has drawn condemnation from the United Nations and the International Criminal Court.
The Times: Thousands flee Mali's deadly crossfire
IT was dusk when the gunmen came to Rouki's village in northern Mali and killed her eight-year-old son, Bashir.
CS Monitor: Christians retaliate after three more churches bombed in Nigeria
Suspected Islamic militants bombed worshipers at three Christian churches on Sunday in northern Nigeria, killing some 23 people.
AP: 21 killed in more attacks on Christian churches in Nigeria, worsening religious tensions
Suicide bombers killed 21 people in attacks on three churches in Nigeria during Sunday services, exacerbating religious tensions in a West African nation that is almost evenly divided between Muslims and Christians.
Post-Dispatch: At meeting in St. Louis, Catholic theologians defend one of their own
The head of the Jesuit order in East Africa explained to other theologians gathered here last week that a simple gesture had different meanings in different cultures.
CS Monitor: Nigeria's Boko Haram a holy war? Maybe not entirely
Nigerian Roman Catholic Archbishop John Onaiyekan, on a visit to Kenya, said the Islamist Boko Haram insurgency is as rooted in bad governance as much as in its push for Islamic sharia law.
Globe and Mail: Liberia proves the power of prayer
Sometimes there is an opportunity to document that the power of God is real.
CS Monitor: Somalia, African Union forces attack Islamist-held camp
A major offensive aimed at clearing Somalia’s Al Qaeda-allied Islamist army from the world’s largest camp for displaced people began Tuesday, amid fears that civilians could end up in the firing line.
CS Monitor: Mixed reactions over Malawi's plan to repeal anti-gay law
Malawi's President Joyce Banda has announced her intention to repeal a number of laws that have made Malawi into a pariah state, from its ban on homosexuality to broad police powers of search and arrest, to a law that allows cabinet ministers to shut down newspapers.
AP: In N. Mali, Islamists flex muscles, banning booze, uncovered women and whipping violators
In one town in northern Mali a man has been whipped for drinking alcohol.
AP: Nigeria journalists become target of radical sect
Nigeria journalists, already the targets of threats and bribes, face a new danger after a radical Islamist sect bombed the offices of a major newspaper in the country and vowed to "hit the media hard" in Africa's most populous nation.
Economist: Giving divorce a bad name
THE cold war between Africa’s newest neighbours is heating up.
WSJ: Two deadly attacks hit in Nigeria
A car bomb exploded near a church in the Nigerian town of Kaduna on Sunday in the deadliest attack in months, killing dozens and likely dealing a fresh blow to peace talks between the government and militants.
Guardian: Mali rebels declare independence in north as fears grow over extremist links
Tuareg rebels who swept across the deserts of northern Mali in the aftermath of a coup in the country's capital have attempted to consolidate their power in the region, declaring an independent nation.
AP: Mali’s neighbors impose financial sanctions on the country in effort to reverse coup
The body representing West African nations on Monday imposed severe financial sanctions on Mali, after a 72-hour deadline elapsed and the soldiers that recently seized power failed to fully restore constitutional order.
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