pewforum.org Religion News on the Web

Religion News on the Web

Selected religion-related news from around the Web
Irish Times: Muslim Brotherhood candidate insists party against mixing religion and politics
THE MUSLIM Brotherhood expects its political arm, the Freedom and Justice Party, will win a solid bloc of seats in Egypt’s new people’s assembly, the first freely elected parliament in the country’s history.
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.
Globe and Mail: Egyptian academics fear rise of Islamist political parties
Islamist parties appear to have won a majority of votes in the pivotal first round of Egypt’s parliamentary elections conducted this week.
NYT: Egypt’s Christians prepare for new political climate
A young woman with a kerchief on her head lit a candle and prayed Sunday beneath a mosaic of Mary and Jesus at a packed Mass at St. Mark’s Coptic Orthodox Church.
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.
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.
Newsweek: When the judge is your enemy
War has a way of testing a country’s commitment to civil liberties like nothing else.
NYT: Moderate Islamist party to lead coalition government in Morocco
A moderate Islamist party achieved major gains in Morocco’s parliamentary election, according to final returns announced by the government on Sunday, giving it the right to lead a coalition government.
Guardian: Jerusalem dance studio is the new frontline in battle for secular liberty
The concentration on the dancers' faces was clear through the large windows. In leggings and layers of loose tops, the young women and men arched and spun gracefully as they rehearsed Babel, the contemporary dance show currently performing in Jerusalem.
National Post: Opinion: As Arab Spring topples dictators, Iran’s influence grows
Not since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after the First World War has the Middle East experienced such comprehensive change.
Daily Star: Is the Orthodox gathering set to anchor sectarianism?
In principle, all Lebanese political forces agree that the country’s much-sought-after political reform should come through the ratification of a fair and balanced electoral law.
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.
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.
AP: Morocco's Islamists may bolster _ or even run _ the next government after elections
Once seen as a threat to this North African kingdom, Morocco's Islamist party may now be key to the government's credibility.
NYT: For women in Libya, a long road to rights
The women of Libya are at a stage between hopes for more rights and fears about the possibility of civil war.
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.
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.
AP: From Pakistani slum, 5,000 seat church rises, showing resilience of community under fire
Pakistan's tiny and downtrodden Christian community thought big when constructing its latest church — a domed, three-story building that towers over the sprawling slum it serves and is the largest yet in the violent, Muslim country.
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.
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.
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