11 – 17 February Islam in Media Roundup

Turks Examine Their Muslim Devotion After Poll Says Faith Could Be Waning

Turks Examine Their Muslim Devotion After Poll Says Faith Could Be Waning

NPR

Turkey has been governed for most of the past two decades by a party steeped in political Islam. So when a pollster recently surveyed personal beliefs, there was a finding that stood out: Levels of piety were flat, or even declining, compared with a decade ago. 
Read More

A far-right politician converted to Islam. It’s not as surprising as it sounds.

A far-right politician converted to Islam. It’s not as surprising as it sounds.

The Washington Post

Khaled Diab examines the fascinating case of Joram van Klaveren.
Read More

No court has used it, but SC lawmaker continues lonely push to ban Sharia law

No court has used it, but SC lawmaker continues lonely push to ban Sharia law

The News & Observer

State Sen. Larry Grooms last month introduced a bill to prevent the use of “foreign law” in South Carolina. The country’s largest group of legal professionals opposes the effort, which the Council on American-Islamic Relations says is part of a thinly veiled national movement to demonize the Islamic faith.
Read More

Iraqi Christians fear returning home, wary of Shiite militia

Iraqi Christians fear returning home, wary of Shiite militia

AP News

Thirty years ago, the population of Bartella, Iraq was entirely Christian. Demographic changes over the decades left the town split between Christians and an ethnic group known as Shabak, who are largely Shiites. When the Islamic State group overran the town and the rest of northern Iraq in 2014, Bartella’s entire population fled — since both communities were persecuted by the radicals.
Read More

China rejects Turkey criticism on Uighurs, denies poet's death

China rejects Turkey criticism on Uighurs, denies poet's death

Al Jazeera

Ankara had condemned Beijing’s treatment of its Muslim ethnic Uighur minority, calling it a ‘shame for humanity’.
Read More

Iran’s revolution bridged sectarian rift before deepening it

Iran’s revolution bridged sectarian rift before deepening it

AP News

Islamists initially saw Iran’s revolution as the start of an effort to push out the strongman Arab nationalism that had taken hold across the Middle East.
Read More

Forty years on from the Iranian Revolution, could the country be at risk of another one?

Forty years on from the Iranian Revolution, could the country be at risk of another one?

The Conversation

Iran’s ruling clergy are celebrating the 40th anniversary of the 1979 revolution, during which Shi’ite Islamists, led by religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini, toppled Mohammad Reza Shah’s secular monarchy.
Read More

US Muslim leaders call on China to end persecution of Uighurs

US Muslim leaders call on China to end persecution of Uighurs

Religious News Service

More than 130 American Muslim leaders and scholars have signed an open letter condemning the Chinese government’s continued persecution and detention of the mostly Muslim Uighur minority.
Read More

Conflict over Shiite and Sunni endowments erupts in Mosul

Conflict over Shiite and Sunni endowments erupts in Mosul

Al-Monitor

Sunni endowments in Mosul are complaining about Shi’ite control over the city’s religious sites.
Read More

Rohingya activists bemoan failure of Muslim countries to address Myanmar crisis

Rohingya activists bemoan failure of Muslim countries to address Myanmar crisis

Middle East Eye

Activists are accusing Muslim-majority governments of neglecting Rohingya after Riyadh deports another set of refugees to Bangladesh.
Read More

Australia called to act against Chinese detention of Uighurs

Australia called to act against Chinese detention of Uighurs

Al Jazeera

Members of the Uighur Muslim community in Australia are renewing calls for action from the government amid reports that a number of Australian permanent residents are effectively trapped in China’s Xinjiang province.
Read More

The Religious-Liberty Claim the Justices Didn’t Want to Hear

The Religious-Liberty Claim the Justices Didn’t Want to Hear

The Atlantic

If the free-exercise clause allows you not to bake and sell a cake, argues Wajahat Ali, maybe it should also allow you to have an imam at your own execution.
Read More

Uighurs to China: Post a video of my missing relatives, too

Uighurs to China: Post a video of my missing relatives, too

AP News

Members of the Uighur Muslim ethnic group have launched a social media campaign calling on China to post videos of their relatives who have disappeared into a vast system of internment camps.
Read More

Revolution at 40: Qom seminary at crossroads over clergy’s future in Iran

Revolution at 40: Qom seminary at crossroads over clergy’s future in Iran

Al-Monitor

Forty years after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the holy city of Qom is once again caught in a struggle over the future of the seminary — and perhaps the country. But while the essence of the clash may not be novel, the camps — and indeed the broader composition of the seminary — have vastly changed.
Read More

In Pictures: Iran celebrates 40 years of Islamic revolution

In Pictures: Iran celebrates 40 years of Islamic revolution

Al Jazeera

After four decades of political and economic difficulties, Iranians put on a brave face and vow to defend the Islamic Republic.
Read More

Christian student challenged a school history lesson on Islam and lost in court

Christian student challenged a school history lesson on Islam and lost in court

The Washington Post

A federal appeals court in Maryland has sided with the school district after the family of a high school student who claims she was “forced to convert” to Islam in a history class that “denigrated her Christian beliefs.”
Read More

Islam vs Societal Ethics: Scholars on How Public Perception Affects Religion

Islam vs Societal Ethics: Scholars on How Public Perception Affects Religion

Sputniknews

Speaking to Sputnik, UK researcher Hamza Andreas Tzortzis and US academic Joshua Landis shared their views on the pontiff’s journey and the results of a YouGov poll on Americans and Europeans’ attitudes towards Islam.
Read More

Explainer: factors that foster conflict in Nigeria’s Kaduna state

Explainer: factors that foster conflict in Nigeria’s Kaduna state

The Conversation

Nigeria’s Kaduna State has been embroiled in conflict for decades. The violence has its roots in ethnic tensions between the state’s Muslim and non-Muslim populations, says Damilola Agbalajobi.
Read More

Gay Muslim comic gone from Instagram after Indonesia warning

Gay Muslim comic gone from Instagram after Indonesia warning

AP News

An Instagram account that published comic strips depicting the struggles of gay Muslims in Indonesia has disappeared following a frenzy of outrage online in the world’s most populous Muslim nation.
Read More

Bangladesh proposes safe zone in Myanmar for Rohingya refugees

Bangladesh proposes safe zone in Myanmar for Rohingya refugees

Al Jazeera

Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen has called on Russia, China and India to help Dhaka in tackling the Rohingya refugee crisis.
Read More

Forty years for a mosque killer, when murderers of white victims get 75?

Forty years for a mosque killer, when murderers of white victims get 75?

The Guardian

Emer O’Toole argues that Canadian justice is rightly in the dock over inconsistencies involving the race or religion of victims.
Read More

MIT faces backlash over invited speaker’s anti-Muslim comments

MIT faces backlash over invited speaker’s anti-Muslim comments

Religion News Service

Indian-American and Muslim groups are pushing the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to revoke a speaking invitation given to the BJP’s Subramanian Swamy over his record of anti-Muslim remarks.
Read More

Cubs’ Theo Epstein confronted Joe Ricketts’ hate head on — and it was very good

Cubs’ Theo Epstein confronted Joe Ricketts’ hate head on — and it was very good

Chicago Sun-Times

“If you want to win in baseball,” says Epstein, “you have to embrace diversity fully. Being around people from different backgrounds has to help you increase your empathy and understand people, or else you won’t last long in this game. That’s honestly what I think of when I think about baseball.’’
Read More

Why some young Muslim women are leaning into arranged marriages

Why some young Muslim women are leaning into arranged marriages

Religion News Service

The co-founders of a “halal” dating tool claim that at least 15,000 users have gotten married after meeting through Muzmatch. And dozens of other options, from Salaam Swipe to Minder, are gaining traction among young Muslims looking to find a life partner while staying within the bounds of their faith.
Read More

Iranian revolution: world’s reactions show that four decades on, tensions remain as high as ever

Iranian revolution: world’s reactions show that four decades on, tensions remain as high as ever

The Conversation

The 40th anniversary of Iran’s Islamic revolution in February 1979 was greeted by an extraordinary tweet from US president Donald Trump. In both English and Arabic, it referred to “40 years of failure” and said the Iranian people deserved a “much brighter future”.
Read More

A milestone in the complex dialogue between Islam and Christianity

A milestone in the complex dialogue between Islam and Christianity

Middle East Eye

Pope Francis and Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb have signed a declaration forging a united front against attempts to manipulate religion.
Read More

Indonesia’s Next Election Is in April. The Islamists Have Already Won.

Indonesia’s Next Election Is in April. The Islamists Have Already Won.

The New York Times

Indonesian novelist Eka Kurniawan explains how religion has come to dominate politics in the world’s largest Muslim democracy.
Read More

How Islam in the West is influenced from abroad

How Islam in the West is influenced from abroad

The Economist

This article, part of an Economist Special Report on Islam and the West, explains how foreign funding of Europe’s mosques is a mixed blessing.
Read More

The politics of Shīʿīsm: New religious challenges to Iran's theocracy

The politics of Shīʿīsm: New religious challenges to Iran's theocracy

ABC

Forty years after the establishment of an “Islamic Republic” Naser Ghobadzadeh observes that Iran’s ruling clergy have lost their unrivalled position in the country’s politico-religious landscape, and are struggling to compete with two other religious discourses which undermine and challenge the ruling clergy’s own religious and political credibility.
Read More

The West is encouraging a vicious war between Sunnis and Shias — that's the real truth about Iran and Saudi Arabia

The West is encouraging a vicious war between Sunnis and Shias — that's the real truth about Iran and Saudi Arabia

The Independent

For correspondent Robert Fisk, it is pitiful to listen to Netanyahu blathering on about ‘the last anniversary of the revolution [the Iranians] will celebrate’ if Iran attacks Tel Aviv. It is equally pitiful to listen to a Revolutionary Guards commander claiming that Iran could demolish entire cities in Israel if the US attacked Iran.
Read More

Anti-Semitism has spread through the Islamic world like cancer

Anti-Semitism has spread through the Islamic world like cancer

The Washington Post

Fareed Zakaria examines the complex and largely misunderstood history of anti-Semitism in the Islamic world, and says now as much as any other time, we should all be aware of it.
Read More

Celebrating Valentine’s Day isn’t always straightforward for some Muslims – here’s why

Celebrating Valentine’s Day isn’t always straightforward for some Muslims – here’s why

The Independent

Muslim communities of the UK, especially young people, have organically developed a sense of cultural maturity that would be unimaginable amongst earlier generations.
Read More

My Father Faces the Death Penalty. This Is Justice in Saudi Arabia.

My Father Faces the Death Penalty. This Is Justice in Saudi Arabia.

The New York Times

Abdullah Alaoudh says the kingdom’s judiciary is being pushed far from any semblance of the rule of law and due process.
Read More

 Meet Sadaf Jaffer, America’s first female Muslim mayor

Meet Sadaf Jaffer, America’s first female Muslim mayor

Religion News Service

Last month Sadaf Jaffer was sworn in as mayor of a New Jersey town just north of Princeton. She is America’s first female Muslim mayor and the first Pakistani-American one as well. She holds a Ph.D. from Harvard in Islam, gender studies and South Asian history.
Read More

 Blinded by the Israel-Palestine conflict, American Muslims and American Jews overlook the need for domestic unity

Blinded by the Israel-Palestine conflict, American Muslims and American Jews overlook the need for domestic unity

The Washington Post

An atmosphere of hatred, and debates about the U.S.-Israel alliance wrap Jewish and Muslim Americans into an international conflict at the cost of domestic unity. And we simply can’t afford that, says Elisabeth Becker-Topkara.
Read More

Myanmar court sentences two to death for Muslim lawyer's murder

Myanmar court sentences two to death for Muslim lawyer's murder

Al Jazeera

A Yangon court sentenced two men to death for the 2017 murder of Ko Ni, an aide to Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Read More

Muslims, Christians in Nigeria pray for peaceful elections, disagree over candidates

Muslims, Christians in Nigeria pray for peaceful elections, disagree over candidates

Religion News Service

As elections draw near in the West African nation, thousands of worshipers continue to gather at mosques and churches to pray for peace, unity, and stability.
Read More

The 30m Muslims living in Europe and America are gradually becoming integrated

The 30m Muslims living in Europe and America are gradually becoming integrated

The Economist

Muslims have had a significant presence in the West for three generations, says Nicolas Pelham. Though both sides remain wary, they are getting closer.
Read More

Third of Britons believe Islam threatens British way of life, says report

Third of Britons believe Islam threatens British way of life, says report

The Guardian

Anti-fascist organization Hope Not Hate’s annual “State of Hate” report, which will be launched on Monday, argues that anti-Muslim prejudice has replaced immigration as the key driver of the growth of the far right.
Read More

 

Maydan editors selected some of the most thought-provoking news items on issues around Islam, religion and public-life for you. Let us know what you have been reading. Drop us a line at mediaroundups@themaydan.com!