Friday Links — September 26, 2008

Friday Links — September 26, 2008 September 26, 2008
  • A Saudi couple who have been dating online for the last three years will marry (in real life) later this year. It sounds sort of sweet until you read that the man is in his thirties and his girlfriend, whose age isn’t given, is referred to as a “girl.” Here’s hoping she’s legal; the article mentions “spinsterhood” as not being married by age 30, but doesn’t state the woman’s age.
  • The man who is accused of murdering Suzanne Tamim publishes a letter in an attempt to clear his name.
  • Amirah Bouraba writes about her struggles as a new Muslim during Ramadan.
  • Menassat writes about the “postponement” of Palestine’s first soap opera, Mattab.
  • Rasha Elass writes about some of the negative aspects of the Syrian Qubeisiat for The National.
  • Samaha looks at her own practices when veiling for prayer and brings up some really interesting conclusions.
West Bank Muslims wait at a checkpoint to be granted access to the Al Aqsa mosque for Friday prayers. Via BBC. O
West Bank Muslims wait at a checkpoint to be granted access to the Al Aqsa mosque for Friday prayers. Via BBC.
  • LGBTQ Iraqis are being executed by Islamist death squads. May Allah give them peace and justice.
  • The Hate Hurts America Coalition has created a website to counter the movie Obsession, which we reported on last week.
  • Crypto-Muslim writes about removing her headscarf and confronting white privilege.
  • Iranian filmmaker Samira Makhmalbaf’s film Two Legged Horse premieres at the San Sebastian Film Festival.
  • The Gulf Weekly looks at female off-roading instructor Narmeen Ismael.
  • The University of Otago is teaching a paper on Muslim women–offered by a non-Muslim woman who earned her PhD on the topic of women characters in the Qur’an and in Hebrew.
  • KABOBfest looks at the Iraqi character Ameera on American soap opera As the World Turns.
  • Morocco’s Supreme Scientific Council condemned a fatwa issued by Salafi preacher Sheikh Mohamed al-Maghrawi that says girls can marry at age nine.
  • gulfnews.com looks at the “women question” in response to Dalia Mogahed and John Esposito’s book, Who Speaks For Islam?

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