Religion News on the Web
Selected religion-related news from around the Web
November 30, 2011
- The Wall Street Journal
WSJ: Egypt's Islamists pushed to right
The elections that began this week in Egypt,
already expected to help transform a nation emerging from decades of
autocratic rule, also holds the potential to push Egypt's powerful
Islamists toward more conservative stances.
November 28, 2011
- The Associated Press
AP: Somali militants ban 16 aid groups and UN agencies
The Somali militant group al-Shabab on Monday
banned 16 aid groups — including a half dozen U.N. agencies — from
central and southern Somalia, a rejection of assistance that falls in
line with the group's skeptical view of the outside world.
November 28, 2011
- The New York Times
NYT: Israeli leader visits Jordan to discuss Palestinian issue
King Abdullah II of Jordan played host on Monday to Shimon Peres, the
president of Israel, in an effort to make progress on the stubborn
Palestinian question at a time of regional diplomatic uncertainty and
fragmentation.
November 24, 2011
- The New York Times
NYT: Rival Palestinian leaders meet but fail to end rift
President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority and the leader of the rival Islamic group Hamas met Thursday and the sides agreed to go ahead with elections in the Palestinian
territories next year, according to officials, even as they failed to
resolve differences over an interim unity government to prepare for the
vote.
November 23, 2011
- National Post
National Post: Opinion: The Coptic condition
I know a number of people of a certain age who were born in the
Egyptian city of Alexandria. They tend to be cultivated, lively, warm
and cosmopolitan.
November 22, 2011
- The New York Times
NYT: Opinion: Israel and ‘pinkwashing’
“In dreams begin responsibilities,” wrote Yeats in 1914. These words
resonate with lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people who have
witnessed dramatic shifts in our relationship to power.
November 21, 2011
- The Korea Herald
Korea Herald: Islam offers a third way in Pakistan, Tunisia
During the worldwide depression of the mid-1930s, the poet and Islamic
modernist Muhammad Iqbal, often called Pakistan’s spiritual founder,
wrote a poem dramatizing the inadequacies of Western political and
economic systems.
November 19, 2011
- The Economist
Economist: The right to be hidden
SOON after the liberation of Tripoli, the Libyan capital, this correspondent met a woman sporting a niqab, or
face veil, along with a floor-length black dress and black gloves.
November 19, 2011
- The Economist
Economist: Left v right
Whereas Israel’s voters have been moving to the nationalist and
religious right, most of its top judges have clung to a more liberal and
secular view of the world.