Friday Links — May 1, 2009

May 1st, 2009
Fatemeh
  • Dr. Fahmida Mirza, Pakistan’s first female speaker of the national assembly, asks for help for Pakistan.
  • Five years after the 2004 family code reform in Morocco, writers weigh in on the reforms’ effects.
  • The New York Times reviews Dragon Fighter, the story of one Uighur Muslim woman’s fight for peace with China.
  • Bitch magazine wonders whether a recent priest, who has announced that she is both Christian and Muslim (and been defrocked for it), is receiving the same treatment that her white male counterparts are.
  • Jamerican Muslimah gives her thoughts on Dalia Mogahed’s appointment to the Obama administration’s faith council.
  • Joseph Shahadi conducts a fantastic interview with playwright Sabina England: parts one and two.
  • Female candidates have swept the election, winning all seats in Indonesia’s Borneo province of West Kalimantan.
  • Ayman Udas, a rising Pakistani singer, has been murdered. May Allah give her peace and justice.

UPDATED: Amnesty International reports that Delara Darabi has been executed. My Allah give her peace and justice.

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No Responses to “Friday Links — May 1, 2009”

  1. s.c. says:

    I really liked the interview with Sabina England. I really like interviews with Muslimah artists anyways since it lets folks know what a diverse and varied lot Muslimah’s are. May Allah grant her success in all she wishes to do.

  2. [...] news report I refer to is something Fatemeh had posted up on the Friday Links last week. It revealed that the occurrence of anorexia nervosa amongst young women aged 13 to 19 [...]

  3. [...] news report I refer to is something Fatemeh had posted up on the Friday Links last week. It revealed that the occurrence of anorexia nervosa amongst young women aged 13 to 19 [...]

  4. Dude says:

    After thieves rob a jewelry store using hijabs as a disguise, Muslim women are banned from wearing headscarves in the store. The twist: the store owners are Muslims.

    This is quite misleading. They did not ban headscarves.