An open letter to India
Dear India,⠀⠀I believed in every word uttered by Allama Iqbal in “Saare Jahan se Accha, […]
An open letter to India Read More »
Dear India,⠀⠀I believed in every word uttered by Allama Iqbal in “Saare Jahan se Accha, […]
An open letter to India Read More »
Update: We have been informed that she is not “the first” but the achievement still
Raffia Arshad becomes one of the first hijab observing Muslim UK Court Judge. Read More »
Muhammed Usman Ali from Theni who also recovered from the virus told Express, “I was asymptomatic but got myself tested after the Jamaat told us that all of us should. It turned out that I was positive but I fought off the virus and have bounced back stronger than before. If the Government calls for us, we will all be there to donate our plasma.”
Jamaat attendees in Tamil Nadu who recovered from COVID-19 want to donate plasma Read More »
No iftar parties, no special outings, and no taraweeh prayers in mosques — Ramzan 2020 will be unlike any
Not iftar parties, Delhi’s young Muslims will mark this Ramzan by feeding the poor Read More »
A mosque and a gurudwara have come together in south Delhi’s Kalu Sarai neighbourhood to
This Story was Published on India.com edited by Zarafshan Shiraz. The millennials have grown up
Wikipedia CEO Jimmy Wales Pulls Down ‘Fake’ Articles on Tablighi Jamaat Read More »
Early Life My parents followed and taught me, a blend of Jainism and Hinduism. Growing
How “MTV to Mecca” put me on a path to Guidance. Read More »
The doctor’s colleagues said she was dressed in her best attire, the protective gear, on the day of her marriage, which was postponed on her request.
‘Marriage can wait, not my patients’: Kerala doctor puts service ahead of marriage Read More »
“Where will I go? I need someone to take care of me, and I have no family left,” said Nizamuddin, who lost his family members and his limbs in the Delhi riots.
Coronavirus Fears Are a Double Whammy for Displaced Victims of Delhi Riots Read More »
The term Islamophobia was coined during the 1990s, referring neither to labour, as with anti-black racism, nor capital, as with antisemitism, but a global arena without a politics of its own. Islamophobia has not supplanted its racist predecessors, but energised them in a context where nation states seem unable to display political mastery against non-state forces, whether environmental, economic or civilisational.
From Xinjiang to Germany: how did Islamophobia become a global phenomenon? Read More »