[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating about Islam and reflects a wide variety of opinions and approaches. It does not reflect the views of the Critical Currents in Islam page or of Jadaliyya. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week`s roundup to cci@jadaliyya.com by Saturday night of every week.]

The objectification of refugees: We must not lose our humanity in search of a headline

Middle East Eye

In reporting from refugee camps, there is a fine line between raising awareness and treating war-scarred refugees as if they were performers in a circus freak show. Read More

The Travel Ban Shows What Happens When the Supreme Court Trusts Trump

The New York Times

A year ago, the Supreme Court upheld, by a 5-4 vote, President Trump’s imposition of a ban on travel from several predominantly Muslim countries. The court’s decision was gravely disappointing the day it was handed down. A year later, it looks even worse. Read More

The Tragedy of Egypt's Mohamed Morsi

The Atlantic

Mohamed Morsi was a deeply flawed but democratically elected president. His death shows how much his country has lost. Read More

Algeria's Hirak marches on in the face of official warnings

Al Monitor

Protest movements in Algeria are ongoing, and proving resistant to efforts to hijack them to suit undemocratic agendas. Read More

Muslim Health Care for All

Foreign Policy

Religious communities in the United States are working independently and internally to provide free health care and overcome anti-immigrant sentiment. Read More

Australia repatriating 8 youth from Islamic State families

Associated Press

Eight children of two slain Islamic State group fighters had been removed from Syria in Australia’s first organized repatriation from the conflict zone, Australia’s prime minister said on Monday. Read More

Anti-Islamic extremist permanently excluded from entering UK

The Guardian

A prominent anti-Islamic extremist whose organisation is being investigated in Austria over links to the Christchurch shooting suspect has apparently been permanently excluded from entering the UK. Read More

'Shame and humiliation': Aceh's Islamic law violates human rights

Al Jazeera

Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra, is one of Indonesia’s most religiously conservative areas, and is the only part of the archipelago to impose penalties on its residents under Islamic law. Punishments under shari'a are rooted in cultural traditions and few are willing to speak publicly against it. Read More

A School With No Heat or Computers but Many College-Bound Students. Mostly Girls.

The New York Times

In a school in rural Afghanistan where there is no electricity, heat, working computers or copy machines and one teacher said she has fewer books than students, sixty of sixty-five graduates this year, many of whom have illiterate parents, are set to attend college next year. Read More

Morsi’s death in Egypt puts diminished Muslim Brotherhood back in spotlight

Los Angeles Times

The dramatic courtroom collapse and death of Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s first democratically elected president, has provided a stark reminder of how much his now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood movement has been reduced since the military abruptly removed him from office in 2013. Read More

Nearly half of Tory members would not want Muslim PM – poll

The Guardian

The poll, carried out by YouGov for the anti-racism group "Hope Not Hate," also found that more than two-thirds of Tory members believe the myth that parts of the UK are under shari'a law, and forty-five percent think some areas are not safe for non-Muslims. Read More

Operation Ayatollah Moneybags

Foreign Policy

With tensions rising in the Persian Gulf, the Trump administration has ratcheted up its sanctions against Iran to an unprecedented level, intensifying an existing banking blockade. But the White House has also selected new targets, including by placing personal sanctions on the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Read More

Mohamed Morsi’s death and the West's hypocrisy

Middle East Eye

Consumed by their own narrow interests, writes Professor Alain Gabon, Western leaders cannot be trusted to support genuine democracy in the Middle East. Read More

Protests in Indian cities after Muslim man beaten to death

Al Jazeera

Protests were held in various parts of India on Wednesday following the lynching of a Muslim man, with people demanding an end to what they termed as “lynch terror.”
Read More

India rejects critical US religious freedom report

Al Jazeera

India has hit out at a report by the United States saying religious intolerance was growing under its right-wing government, setting off a new spat ahead of a visit by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Read More

The fight over Trump’s travel ban continues a year after Supreme Court ruling

The Columbus Dispatch

A year after the Supreme Court upheld President Donald Trump’s executive order restricting travel here from certain countries — widely criticized as a “Muslim ban”—activists are still fighting it in the courts and many families remain separated. Read More

UN rights chief: Relatives of ex-IS fighters should go home

Associated Press

Thousands of relatives of former foreign fighters in the Islamic State group should be repatriated, the U.N. human rights chief said Monday, insisting children, in particular, have suffered “grievous violations” of their rights — a challenge to European and other countries that have been reticent about taking back jihadis and their relatives. Read More

Trump's Muslim ban: US lawmakers vow to repeal 'hateful' order

Middle East Eye

Activists and politicians joined forces this week to mark the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision upholding President Trump’s executive order banning immigrants from several Muslim majority countries from entering the US. Read More

How a Fringe Muslim Cleric From Australia Became a Hero to America’s Far Right

The Intercept

For Islamophobes, Mohamad Tawhidi is something very close to a godsend. A Shia Muslim cleric, raised in Australia and educated in Iran, Tawhidi presents himself as an Islamic reformer who embraces and amplifies far-right warnings that immigration by his fellow Muslims poses an existential threat to Western civilization. Read More

Pools in France close after women defy burkini ban

Al Jazeera

Seven burkini-clad women, accompanied by activists from the Alliance Citoyenne rights group, went to the Grenoble pools on Sunday demanding the right to bathe – despite a municipal ban on the swimwear worn by Muslim women. They said the ban was discrimination. Read More

Lebanese town bans Muslims from buying, renting property

Associated Press

The town of Hadat is a small example of Lebanon’s deeply rooted sectarian divisions that once led to a fifteen-year civil war that left more than one hundred thousand people dead. Christian communities feel under siege as Muslims, who tend to have higher birth rates, leave overcrowded areas for once predominantly Christian neighborhoods. Read More

'Obvious religious hatred': Muslim man in India lynched on video

Al Jazeera

Indian police say they have arrested eleven people over the torture of a Muslim man who later died of his wounds, in the latest suspected lynching in the country by Hindu vigilantes. Read More

Iraqis welcome Pope Francis' plan to visit in 2020

Al Monitor

Muslim leaders in Iraq are joining Christians in expressing their enthusiasm for Pope Francis’ planned visit next year. Read More

Malaysia reopens probe into kidnapping of Shia activist, pastor

Al Jazeera

Malaysia’s government has set up a special taskforce to reinvestigate the kidnappings of two activists – Amri Che Mat and Raymond Koh – after the country’s human rights commission blamed the police’s intelligence branch for the abductions. Read More

A Muslim In Rural, White Minnesota On How To 'Love Thy Neighbor'

NPR

Dr. Ayaz Virji talks to NPR about his experiences moving his family to the small town of Dawson, MN. His book was published 11 June. Read More

Egypt's ex-President Mohamed Morsi dies after court appearance

Al Jazeera

Egypt’s first democratically elected president, and the first civilian to hold the office in that country, died on Monday in a Cairo courthouse during his trial on charges of espionage. His family has not been allowed to take possession of his body. Read More

Mohamed Morsi Died in a Soundproof Cage

The New York Times

Mona Eltahawy provides her examination of “what six years of deliberate and sustained cruelty tell us about el-Sisi’s Egypt.” Read More

Mohamed Morsi's death and the power of Arab despots

Middle East Eye

Professor Madawi al-Rasheed, of King’s College London and the London School of Economics, says the death of Egypt’s first democratically elected president should be a wake-up call for Western leaders aiding despots. Read More

Egypt's Morsi: The Final Hours

Al Jazeera

Al Jazeera World’s March 2019 documentary about the mass protests and military coup that took down President Mohamed Morsi in July 2013. Read More

So, what really is jihad?

The Conversation

Michigan State Professor Mohammad Hassan Khalil observes that, “violent radicals who attempt to justify terrorism on religious grounds are often misrepresenting the scholarly sources they cite” and offers important clarification on the issue of jihad. Read More

Nike releases ‘Pro Hijab’ to meet demand for modest fashions

New York Post

Sportswear brand Nike was way ahead of the curve when it launched its first-ever hijab back in December 2017. Now, back by popular demand, the brand has unveiled a new version of the performance wear piece. Read More

Follow Me, Akhi by Hussein Kesvani review – how social media is changing liberal Islam

The Guardian

Burham Wazir reviews “a thoughtful and witty account of how British Muslims interact with the online world”. Read More

How Muslims became the good guys on TV

BBC

Hit show Homeland is about to end, after many years casting Islam as the enemy. But in its place has come a wave of thrillers portraying Muslims as heroes, writes Mohammad Zaheer. Read More

The Arab world in seven charts: Are Arabs turning their backs on religion?

BBC

Arabs are increasingly saying they are no longer religious, according to the largest and most in-depth survey undertaken of the Middle East and North Africa. Read More

After fascist threat to Houston mosque, Texas Muslims call for increased security

Religion News Service

“Based on recent events and hate crimes targeting American Muslims, immigrant communities and other minority groups, it is critical that we take these threats seriously and bring the perpetrators to justice,” says Lubabah Abdullah, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Houston chapter. Last month, CAIR announced that it had reported more than five hundred incidences of anti-Muslim bias or harassment in the United States already this year. Read More

Pope seeks more freedom in theology, dialogue with Islam

Associated Press

Pope Francis called Friday for a reform of the way theology is taught in Catholic schools, saying students must learn about dialogue with Judaism and Islam, and that overall there must be greater freedom in theological research and academic pursuits. Read More

Former Romanian president, now MEP: ‘EU seems to tell us we must live with Muslim invasion’

Politico

Former Romanian President Traian Băsescu, newly elected as an MEP as part of the European People’s Party, slammed EU inaction on migration and what he sees as the bloc’s inability to protect its borders. Read More

The EU's Islamophobia is getting worse – Britain must fight this from within

The Guardian

Yasmin Qureshi warns that although far-right parties did not do as well in last month’s EU parliament elections as many feared they would, nationalism is still on the rise across the continent, and the EU is not an innocent bystander. Read More

Mahathir explores Islamic heritage

The Star Online

The Albukhary Foundation Gal­lery is helping British Museum to redisplay its important collections on Islamic heritage and reflect the connections between the cultures of Islam and the ancient world on the one hand, and the cultures of the Mediterranean world and Europe on the other hand. Read More

Hindu monks push government to help build temple on disputed Indian site

Reuters

A militant Hindu mob tore down a sixteenth-century mosque in Ayodhya in 1992, triggering riots that killed about two thousand people, in one of the worst instances of communal violence in India since the 1947 partition of the country. Now, monks are insisting the Hindu-nationalist government rebuild the temple that they say once stood there. Read More

Belgium seeks Uighur family in Xinjiang after disappearance

France 24

The disappearance of a woman and her four children has alarmed her husband, as an estimated one million ethnic Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities are believed to be held in internment camps in Xinjiang. Read More

Faith in ruins: China's vanishing beards and mosques

BBC

The BBC has found new evidence of the increasing control and suppression of Islam in China’s far western region of Xinjiang–including the widespread destruction of mosques. Read More

A Muslim Family Sought Help at the Belgian Embassy in Beijing. The Police Dragged Them Out.

The New York Times

The last time Abdulhamid Tursun spoke to his wife, she was huddled in a Beijing hotel room with their four children, frightened after being evicted from the Belgian Embassy in the dead of night. Suddenly, plainclothes police officers burst into the room, cutting off the couple’s video call. Read More

Six pull out of Bradford festival over counter-extremism funding

The Guardian

Six writers and activists have withdrawn from the Bradford Literary Festival after discovering that it received funding from a UK Home Office “counter-extremism” program. Read More

‘These People Aren’t Coming From Norway’: Refugees in a Minnesota City Face a Backlash

The New York Times

As more Somali refugees arrive in St. Cloud, white anti-immigration activists have pressed an increasingly explicit anti-Muslim agenda. Read More

Gold Refining Techniques Of A Medieval Islamic City Revealed By Experimental Archaeology

Forbes

Archaeologists working at the medieval market city of Tadmekka recently discovered a set of ceramic molds used to cast metal coins. Tadmekka is located today in the country of Mali on the edges of the Saharan desert. Read More

Islamic fatwa approves organ donation after Bristol man's efforts

BBC

After a twenty-three-year campaign, scholars have answered the call of Amjid Ali, who needed a kidney transplant and worked for Britain’s National Health service, with a legal opinion which allows the Muslim community to be more involved in organ donation. Read More

Leadership debate: BBC defends vetting process after imam's tweets emerge

BBC

Imam Abdullah Patel said he was sure he had not criticized Jewish people but stood by criticism of Israeli policy. The broadcaster said: “Had we been aware of the views he expressed he would not have been selected.” Read More

Imam and solicitor suspended from jobs after BBC Tory debate

The Guardian

An imam and a solicitor who asked questions on the BBC’s Conservative leadership debate have been suspended from their jobs after they were criticised over past comments on social media. Read More

Iranian hard-liners praise taxi driver for booting passenger over 'poor' hijab

Al Monitor

When Pooyeh Nourian tweeted her outrage with a Tehran cab driver she had ordered through a popular ride-hailing app, she probably had no idea that her tweets would open a Pandora’s box on Iran’s controversial hijab rules. Read More

Scores of Yemeni women arrested by Houthis in 'political' anti-sex work campaign

Middle East Eye

Houthi rebel authorities say they’re cracking down on immorality, though others say the drive is an attempt to stifle opposition to them. Read More

Global Halal Food Market to Reach US$ 2,043.2 Billion by 2027 - Coherent Market Insights

Yahoo Finance

The halal food market is expected to witness significant growth over the forecast period. Factors such as increasing Muslim population worldwide coupled with development in the retail sector supply chain is expected to boost the revenue for global halal food market in the near future. Read More

Iraq considers appointing powerful clerics to high court

Al Monitor

Iraq’s parliament is working on a draft law that could put clerics on the Federal Supreme Court and give them veto power. Read More

Friday blast at Shi'ite mosque in Baghdad wounds several: police sources

Reuters

A bomb blast at a Shi’ite Muslim mosque in eastern Baghdad wounded at least seven people on Friday, security sources said, correcting earlier reports of seven killed. Read More

Rohingya refugees: focusing only on their return home ignores the crime and health crises in Bangladesh’s camps

The Conversation

One of the most pressing issues facing the refugees in Bangladesh’s camps is the fact that they are being increasingly targeted by criminal gangs, and getting involved in criminal activities. Thousands are at risk of human trafficking, while others are being recruited as drug mules. Read More

Canada's Quebec bans religious symbols in some public sector jobs

Al Jazeera

Critics have denounced the move as giving into "politics of fear" as Quebec bans some government employees from wearing religious symbols at work. Read More

Quebec Bill 21: Is it OK for public servants to wear religious symbols?

BBC

For a decade, Quebec has been debating the issues of state secularism and reasonable religious accommodation in the Canadian province. Now it has just passed a new law that bars civil servants in positions of “authority” from wearing religious symbols at work. Read More

Quebec law banning hijab at work creates ‘politics of fear', say critics

The Guardian

Critics of Quebec’s new Bill 21 have argued that the law creates de-facto second class citizenship. “Canada is already a secular state and that is reflected in our institutions.” A spokesman for the Ministry of Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism. “This new law undermines fundamental rights and individual freedoms because it forces some people to choose between their religion and their job.” Read More

Egypt’s Al-Azhar retreats from fatwa on beating women

Al Monitor

After a series of “bombshell” statements on women and marriage, Al-Azhar’s Grand Imam, Ahmed el-Tayeb is courting controversy and dividing Egyptian Muslims and the wider Islamic community. Read More

Senior Islamic cleric issues fatwa against child marriage

The Guardian

One of the world’s most prestigious centers of Islamic learning has issued a fatwa against child marriage, saying marriage should be based on the consent of both parties and “particularly the young woman”. Read More

What is Eid and how do Muslims celebrate it? 6 questions answered

The Conversation

Muslims all over the world are celebrating Eid al-Fitr, one of the religion’s principal festivals. In August, Muslims will celebrate Eid al-Adha. Ken Chitwood, a scholar of global Islam, explains the two Islamic festivals. Read More

Eid al-Fitr 2019: Everything you need to know

Al Jazeera

As Muslims around the world bid Ramadan farewell, they also prepare for Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the Muslim holy month. Read More

The Hijab Friendly Hair Salon

BBC News

For many hijab-clad women, getting your hair done in a regular salon can prove to be an isolating experience. One woman decided to address that by starting the first women’s only salon in New York. Now, her business serves as a safe-haven where hijabi women can be pampered. Read More

As Yemenis prepare for Eid, even celebration is a struggle

Al Jazeera

This year, families celebrate being alive and healthy as poverty, unemployment dampen spirits in war-torn Yemen. Read More

Israeli forces and settlers enter Al-Aqsa Mosque compound

Al Jazeera

Marking Jerusalem Day, when Israelis celebrate their occupation of East Jerusalem after the 1967 war, Israeli forces entered the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound along with hundreds of ultra-nationalist Jews. The Waqf organization which oversees Islam’s third holiest site said police used rubber bullets and pepper spray and arrested seven people. Read More

A Muslim appeal for Saudi Arabia to show mercy

The Economist

At least eighty respected scholars and teachers of the Muslim faith, from many countries but mostly Anglophone ones, have lent their names to a plea to the Saudi authorities. It urges the kingdom to spare the lives of three well-known figures in the world of Islam. Read More

How Muslim leaders can respond in an age of extremism

The Conversation

Terror is a vicious cycle, always a catastrophe for its victims, inevitably a calamity for its perpetrators, and unavoidably a cost for humanity. These researchers ask, can community leaders help mitigate this? and more specifically, examine how Muslim leaders should respond in communities simultaneously blamed for and victimized by terrorism. Read More

Intel: Why Turkey’s transfer of Muslim bloc leadership to Saudis was so uncomfortable

Al Monitor

When two adversaries bump into each other, a common solution is to avoid interaction. But that was not an option for Turkish and Saudi officials this week as Ankara turned over leadership of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to its rival in an unusually frosty handoff. Read More

Hate crimes associated with both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have a long history in America’s past

The Conversation

Hate crimes associated with both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have shown an increase in recent years. But is there an association between the two? Read More

Muslims leave Sri Lanka govt to allow probe of terror claim

Associated Press

Eleven Muslim politicians resigned from top government posts in Sri Lanka on Monday, saying they wanted to enable the government to investigate allegations that some of them had links to the extremists who carried out the deadly Easter attacks. Read More

Qatar expresses reservations over Mecca summit outcome

Al Jazeera

Qatar said on Sunday it had reservations about hardline statements on Iran made at emergency summits in Mecca organized by Saudi Arabia. Read More

During Ramadan, growing Muslim philanthropy enters the spotlight

Religion News Service

“The purpose of fasting is to connect with your creator spiritually,” says Waleed Ahmad, the director of programs at Humanity First USA, a Muslim-led aid organization. “But it’s also to realize there are people in the world who do not get those two meals a day. So let’s at least give our lunch money to them.” Read More

#BlackoutEid: Celebrating being black and Muslim

Al Jazeera

Nena Beecham explains Why we need black Muslim spaces and hashtags like #BlackoutEid. Read More

The Muslims Who Do Not Fast During Ramadan

Atlas Obscura

Members of Senegal’s Baye Fall sect eat, cook, and deliver food in grand processions. Read More

Pop culture got Islam wrong for years. ‘Ramy’ made getting it right look easy.:

Washington Post

Zainab Mudallal writes, “Instead of presenting Islam as a brooding, world-historical force, ‘Ramy’ made religion one of its major subjects, taking audiences inside one person’s spiritual journey. “And “Ramy” took on these tasks as the first show on a mainstream, U.S. outlet that centers around Arab and Muslim experiences. That’s a lot of pressure to place on a freshman series, especially one that runs only ten roughly twenty-five-minute episodes . . . But “Ramy” works because it embraces those challenges.” Read More

Moon sightings, politics play a part in Muslim holiday

Associated Press

Muslims across the Middle East and beyond began Tuesday marking the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr, one of the most celebrated holidays for the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims, amid confusion about the start of the three-day holiday fed partly by political differences. Read More

Muslims celebrate Eid, ending Ramadan holy month

Reuters

Muslims around the world celebrated the Eid-al-Fitr religious holiday on Tuesday, marking the end of Islam’s holy month of Ramadan. Read More

In pictures: Muslims around the world celebrate Eid

BBC News

The “festival of the breaking of the fast” begins when the moon rises on the final day of Ramadan, a holy month of fasting. The timing varies from country to country, with some following the moonrise in Mecca and others using local sightings. Read More

What is Sahwa, the Awakening movement under pressure in Saudi?

Al Jazeera

Scholars linked to the Saudi al-Sahwa al-Islamiyya (Islamic Awakening), or Sahwa, movement, a period of powerful social and political change between the 1960s and 1980s, are reportedly on death row, but Sahwa has not always been out of favor with the kingdom. Read More

Who are the key Sahwa figures Saudi Arabia is cracking down on?

Al Jazeera

Saudi Arabia is currently cracking down on the Sahwa, or Awakening, with at least three figures linked to the movement reported to be on death row. Read More

Wrecked mosques, police watch: A tense Ramadan in Xinjiang

Yahoo News

The corner where Heyitkah Mosque in China’s restive Xinjiang region once hummed with life is now a concrete parking lot where all traces of the tall, domed building have been erased. Read More

Muslims have more visibility than ever. But can we praise it?:

The Washington Post

Fashion writer Hoda Katebi reflects on Sports Illustrated’s swimsuit issue that featured hijabi model Halima Aden in a burkini: “. . . we live at the cusp of both unprecedented Muslim visibility and heightened anti-Muslim racism. If we are not careful, these new modes of representation may contribute to the rise of anti-Muslim racism, rather than combat it.” Read More

Saudi gentrifies Shiite old quarter after crushing revolt

France24

Strip malls and palm-dotted boulevards stand in the once bullet-scarred old quarter of Awamiya, a Shiite-majority town on Saudi Arabia’s oil-rich eastern coast where the long-planned facelift fuelled deadly clashes. Read More

Amid Ramadan celebrations, Jordanians fear an uncertain future

Religion News Service

Although Ramadan is meant to be a month of prayer, self-discipline, and charity toward those less fortunate, it also provides opportunities for reflection on the social and political realities for young Jordanians uncertain about their kingdom’s future. Read More

How the joy of Eid masks an unbearable grief for Yemeni war orphans

Middle East Eye

For the children of Taiz who have lost their parents, the holidays are a painful reminder of their former lives. Read More

The Boy At The Back Of The Class: Hit children's writer on her story of kindness

Middle East Eye

Onjali Q Rauf’s debut novel has become an award-winning hit, spurred by her lifetime of helping others. Read More

Aung San Suu Kyi finds common ground with Orbán over Islam

The Guardian

The leader of Myanmar has found a new ally in far-right, staunchly anti-immigrant Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán. Read More

How will Austria’s new headscarf ban affect Muslims?

The Washington Post

On 16 May, Austria’sparliament approved a law banning headscarves in public primary schools. Authors explore the new policy’s implications for Muslim minority in the central European nation. Read More

Muslim Wellness Foundation's Black Iftar centers culture and healing

The Philadelphia Tribune

The Muslim Wellness Foundation hosted a special Iftar (Ramadan breaking of fast) that centered the experience of Black Muslims Saturday at the Pennyack Mill. Named The Black Iftar (Philly), the event is not exclusively open to Black Muslims, but was designed to fill a void left by racism against Black Muslims and acknowledge their practice of Islam. Read More

Saudi Arabia and Iran after the summits of discontent

Al Jazeera

Saudi Arabia hosted three summits last week – a Gulf, an Arab and an Islamic one – with one common goal: Confront and isolate Iran. All other urgent issues in the region, from the ongoing decimation of Yemen to the implosion of Libya to the daily bombings in Syria and the worsening occupation of Palestine, all had to take a backseat. Read More

Quebec Is Poised to Undermine Religious Freedom

Foreign Policy

With a proposed ban on public employees wearing religious symbols in Quebec to be debated by the legislature by 14 June, the Canadian province is poised to potentially become the first regional government in North America to ban the veil for government staff. Like many bans on religious symbols, this one, in theory, will also target turbans and yarmulkes. In practice, it will hit Muslim women who wear the hijab hardest. Read More

Forced conversions, marriages spike in Pakistan

Religion News Service

“We were walking back to our house after working on the farm when men in a car came out of nowhere and dragged us in with them,” said Suneeta, who is Hindu and lives in Badin, a small city in the south of Pakistan. “The next thing we knew, we were in a shrine being forced to say the kalma (acceptance of Islam) by a cleric.” Read More

Greece: Athens mosque likely to open by September, official says

Al Jazeera

Greece’s education and religion minister says the country’s long-delayed first state-sponsored mosque is likely to begin operating in September, about three years after its construction was approved by parliament. Read More

In northern Nigeria, Muslims and Christians take small steps toward reconciliation

Religion News Service

Recently, a group of Muslims visited Christian widows and orphans in northwestern Nigeria and donated food, clothing and school items as part of efforts to enhance peaceful coexistence among different faiths. Read More

Hope dwindles for cease-fire in Afghanistan at end of Ramadan

The Washington Post

An unprecedented cease-fire last year at the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan saw an influx of Taliban fighters into urban areas, where they mingled with civilians, posed for selfies and raised expectations for successful peace talks that would put an end to the country’s drawn-out war. Despite the spike in violence during Ramadan this year, many were optimistic that a similar arrangement would again be made. Read More