Displaying 51 - 60 of 119.
An article is distributed to university students dictating the means of dealing with non-Muslims.
Jamāl Abū al-Futūh comments on a few-minute long video clip that spread like wildfire via mobile phones among Egyptian youths about the execution of a teenage girl. The clip claimed that the girl is a Copt being stoned because she embraced Islam.
The author discusses the cases of two Coptic girls who have gone missing, while one has been reunited with her family the other is still missing.
The article presents the stories of a number of stories that have been circulating in the press involving the disappearance of a Coptic girl, a street fight between Muslims and Christians, and the blame allegedly being unfairly placed on the Copts involved in the incidents.
The article discusses the alleged disappearance of a 17 year old Coptic girl, Nora Ayoub Sanad.
The case of a Coptic young woman, āmāl Zakī Nasīm, is still open to all possibilities. Ten days after āmāl’s mysterious absence, security forces seem to be failing to obtain any clue about her place or state. The Egyptian press continues to report on the developments in the case.
A new alleged forced disappearance of an 18-year-old Coptic lady sparks protests in Egypt. The woman’s family and a considerable number of Copts are carrying out sit-ins at the church. The family accuses security forces of carelessness. Rumors spread about her escape to marry a Muslim colleague.
The suspended priest Filopātīr Jamīl, pastor of the Virgin Mary Church, is claiming that his suspension was a result of his membership of al-Ghad political party and his support for al-Ghad’s leader, Ayman Nour, in the presidential elections.
Al-Sinbillāwīn city in Daqahlīyah governorate is experiencing sectarian strife after the disappearance of a Muslim girl. A Christian man and Christian employees in the Civil Status Department are suspected of involvement in the kidnapping.
Majdī Khalīl discusses the forced disappearance of Coptic girls. The claims around this phenomenon are not new, however it is being announced more frequently. Khalīl discusses the reasons why Coptic families are more often daring to announce the disappearance of their girls, and the reasons behind...

Pages

Subscribe to