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Friday Links — July 23, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 23 Jul 2010 / 0 Comment
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  • Muslim girls at the London School of Fashion examine faith and fashion. More on “Islamic fashion” here.
  • Spain’s parliament rejected a proposal to ban the niqab, while Syria has banned the niqab from educational facilities. Sumbul Ali-Karamali explores the burqa ban from an American perspective. More on the Syrian ban here.
  • On how garment factories in Bangladesh have changed women’s outlooks on their futures.
  • In north Afghanistan, women are facing a Taliban revival. More from The New York Times and The Daily Beast.
  • The problems with Malaysia’s female Shariah judges.
  • The Arab-American Action Network helps smooth the transition to the United States for Arab women.
  • The Iranian Foreign Ministry has issued a report detailing how the ban on hijab in western societies violates the rights of Muslim minorities there. Irony!
  • MuslimMatters interviews Nai’ma B. Robert about her new book.
  • The U.K.’s Immigration Minister says that imposing a ban on the niqab similar to France’s would be “un-British.” Indeed!
  • Hamas rulers have banned women from smoking water pipes in cafes. More from Arab News.
  • A Pakistani couple has been sentenced to death for alleged adultery. May Allah keep them.

  • Photos of Iranian women in their regional costumes are decorating the walls a Tehran gallery in an exhibition called “Veils of Light.”
  • Yahoo! News gets around to reporting on Aquila magazine.
  • British Parliament member Philip Hollobone has refused to meet with Muslim women who wear niqab.
  • Mona Eltahawy on the burqa ban.
  • The Times Live interviews Shubnum Khan about her shortlist prize for African Writing.
  • The Fourth Islamic Fashion Festival happened: here are pictures.
  • On the rise of inter-religious marriages in Russia.
  • Emirati women are using age-old skills to create modern designs for the handicraft markets.
  • Seven women and three men have been sentenced to death for adultery. May Allah keep them.
  • Twenty undergraduate women from Egypt and Morocco are spending this month at the University of Kansas to attend a leadership program funded the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.
  • From singledom to suicide in Egypt.
  • Women’s eNews interviews Delphine Minoui, who helped Nujood Ali write an autobiography.
  • Uzbek women allege that they have been forcibly sterilized by the government.
  • A female Muslim preacher has been threatened with death for declaring that the niqab is not obligatory.
  • NPR examines China’s female imams.
  • Al-Masry al Youm reviews Ethar El Katatney’s book.
  • Two women in France were thrown out of a public pool for wearing burqinis.
  • elan profiles designer Zolaykha Sherzad.
  • Iran’s government has put fresh pressure on Sakineh Ashtiani, demanding the names of those involved in the campaign for her release.
  • On The Bussy Project.
  • A 17-year-old woman was allegedly murdered by her younger brother after leaving a women’s shelter. May Allah give her peace and justice.

If you see any news about Muslim women from this week that we missed, feel free to post links in the comments!

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