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Al Jazeera on MSNIndia’s ‘political iftars’ once stopped riots. Are they corrupt stunts now?Politicians and parties have used iftars to forge peace during strife but also to woo elite Muslims for votes.
1dOpinion
The Print on MSNAurangzeb keeps haunting Maharashtra politics. This time, he can hurt Fadnavis’ governanceMost of the conflicts in Maharashtra haven't been about Muslims worshipping Aurangzeb. They're about the perception of Hindus ...
Ramadan is here, and every day until the last weekend of March, Muslims the world over will awake ahead of the sun for a meal ...
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Grist on MSNA greener Ramadan: How Atlanta-area mosques are cutting food waste during the Muslim holy monthOne evening in early March, Nina Ansari frowns as she picks up an untouched plate of rice left on the floor of the masjid she ...
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India Today on MSNAurangzeb's tomb isn't in Delhi or Nagpur, but in little-known Khuldabad. Why?A curfew had to be imposed in some areas of Nagpur after protests over Aurangzeb’s tomb turned violent. The 17th-century emperor's final resting place isn’t in Delhi, the seat of Mughal power, or ...
Vignettes From the Past: Political Marginalisation of Muslims and Delhi’s Vanishing Iftar Gatherings
The tradition of iftar gatherings in Delhi, once a symbol of political and social outreach, has significantly dwindled since ...
Ayodhya: Temple town Ayodhya celebrated Holi in harmony, with measures taken to ensure smooth and peaceful celebration, including rescheduling Juma (F.
Teachers, parents, and pastors are mounting a mass resistance against Ryan Walters’s mandate requiring that public school ...
This practice reflects his adherence to Islamic principles and contrasts ... king Aurangzeb spent a portion of his time knitting prayer caps (taqiyah) and copying the Quran by hand.
When society normalises control over women’s clothing, it paves the way for deeper suppression. True liberation begins with choice—because this fight is about more than fabric; it is about freedom its ...
For some, a Muslim prayer alone is a manifestation of ‘extremism’,” Azat Gaunutdinov, an ethnic Tatar man who converted to Islam in jail and started a rights group that monitors the rights ...
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