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openDemocracy: A Long Road -
Abdul-Rehman Malik's farewell letter to Tony Blair
Eurozine: Take me to your leader - The
emergence of "Muslim-ness" as an important marker of identity has
created a new cadre of "professional Muslims" aware that kudos is to be
gained in speaking on the "Muslim problem", writes, Abdul-Rehman Malik.
Beyond the Veil - Fareena
Alam's musings on Veilgate, Newsweek International cover story.
BBC Radio 4, Unveiled - Fareena Alam, travels to Blackburn during the height
of Veilgate. She speaks to Muslims and non-Muslims about the impact of
Minister Jack Straw's comments (Listen via the Q-News podcast).
The New Statesman - Fareena Alam reviews The Caged Virgin, by
Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
MSNBC: Creating a new culture for British Muslims
New Statesman interview with
Fareena Alam - "The
petrodollar-funded literalists think their
version is the real Islam. I'm for an Islam that is at home in Britain"
The Guardian: We must
move beyond the hijab, by Fareena Alam
Had reporters asked, they'd have known a headscarf does not cover the
face...
The Daily
Mail: My
week beneath the burqa, by Tanya Gold
Tanya Gold speaks to Q-News Editor, Fareena Alam about the
week she spent wearing a traditional Afghan burqa...
The Observer: Hear the true voices of Islam, by Abdul-Rehman Malik
Young, disenfranchised Muslims can only be reached by those they
respect...
Press Gazette: Islam - Lifting the veil from media eyes
Fareena
Alam, editor of Q-News, tells Julie Tomlin about
her mission to explain - inside and outside her own community -what a
Muslim magazine should be.
Times Educational
Supplement: Pilgrim on a Rocky Road
Fareena Alam is less than impressed with a personal perspective on the
changing face of Islam...
The Guardian: Bring back real Islam to our
shores, by Fuad Nahdi
Spiritual inequality at home is the root of our national security
fears...
The Guardian: Take the honour out of killing,
by Fareena Alam
Domestic violence in minority communities
must be tackled with
understanding - and not used as an excuse for Islamophobia...
The Observer: Vision for a new Islam, by
Fareena Alam
British Muslims need new leaders who can connect with the realities
faced by today's 'global' young people...
Special Hajj report in The
Guardian from Fuad Nahdi
It is as strange as Mars, but less lonely. Calm has returned to Mina,
the huge tent city south-east of Mecca where a tragic accident killed
more than 250 Muslim pilgrims on Sunday...
The Observer: Making of a
Martyr, by
Martin Bright and Fareena Alam
As the drizzle descended on Hounslow mosque last Friday, it was not
hard to see why Asif Mohammed Hanif might have wanted to spend the
summer in the Middle East...
The Observer:
Murdered cleric's family vow to
continue his work,
by Fareena Alam and Martin Bright
The grieving family of Abdul Majid Al-Khoei speak to The
Observer about his life and legacy as more details of a chaotic killing
emerge...
Fabian
Society:
Whose values?
Who decides?
The terms of reference that define secularism can and must shift to
remain relevant in a world that is constantly changing and
diversifying. What does it mean to be French or British? Isn’t it
constantly changing and evolving?
Managing Editor Fareena Alam speaks at the Fabian Society New Year
Conference 2004.
The
Independent: It's time to say what's good
about being a Muslim
Britain's leading Muslim magazine, Q-News, has a new editor -
aged 24 and a thoroughly modern woman. By Paul Vallely.
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The Observer:
Why I reject the anarchists who claim to
speak for Islam. Violence in the name of Islam has done
more to damage the Prophet than any Danish cartoon, argues Fareena Alam.
Editorial Intelligence: The heart of Empire is
comment’s global capital, says Fuad Nahdi
It is easy to be totally unaware of London’s great export to the rest
of the world: comment...
The
Observer: Muslim boxing hero who unites us all, by Fareena Alam
As a proud Pakistani Briton, Amir Khan defies Islamic stereotypes...
Times Educational Supplement: British press
unite in hysteria over jilbab, by Fareena Alam
Well it seems that the “fundamentalist threat” to British
state
education has been averted yet again...
BBC
Radio 5: Fears as young Muslims 'opt out'
BBC Five Live features a personal documentary by Navid Akhtar a
practising Muslim deeply concerned about a growing trend among his
contemporaries toward a separatist ideology that turns its back on
Britain. Featuring Q-News Managing Editor Fareena Alam.
BBC Newsnight: Drug problem among Muslim
youngsters
Newsnight features the Q-News article Up in Smoke: HT's
failed attempt to fight the War on Drugs, by Dr Reehan Sabri.
BBC Viewpoints: Europe and the headscarf
"What does it mean to be
British or French anyway?" BBC News Online asked eight commentators,
including Managing Editor Fareena Alam, for their views on imposing a
ban on the headscarf.
The Observer: Are we just what we eat?, by
Fareena Alam
British Muslims regard the sudden renewed interest in ritual slaughter
with suspicion and distrust. Must the identity of Britain's largest
minority religion always be reduced to beards, scarves and halal meat?
The Observer: Exiles weep as they
prepare to fly home, by Fareena Alam
Easter Mass at St Anne's Church in central London today will
be extra special for Fahd Dawud. An Iraqi Catholic, he defected from
Saddam's army eight years ago after being forced to serve for more than
12 years. He fled to London with his wife and daughter and has been
unable to return since...
The Guardian:
Can Islam Liberate Women?
Madeleine Bunting meets six Muslim women to discuss Islam and the
position of women.
CBC
Dispatches: Radio documentary on Muslim Britain
CBC Radio documentary on British Muslims by Nazim Baksh, entitled
'Divided Loyalties', available for downloading.
Newsweek:
Exploiting
Grief
Fareena Alam, the Q-News news editor, met with NEWSWEEK's Carla
Power to discuss young British Muslims' reaction to September 11th -
and the global strains it has triggered.
The
Guardian:
Beyond the
veil
Q-News, the magazine whose
news editor was briefly the 'shame of Britain' for making the ex-US
ambassador cry on TV, is the biggest Muslim voice in Europe. Jack
O'Sullivan meets its journalists to find out how they are responding to
the aftermath of the US atrocities while coping with hate mail.
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