religion in the world today
(Published: 2006-02-09 05:06 PM)
(Published: 2005-07-16 08:54 AM)
WASHINGTON People in several predominantly Muslim countries in the Middle East and Asia see less justification now for violence against civilians than they did a year or two ago, and they increasingly share Western concerns about Islamic extremism, a new international poll has found.
(Published: 2005-04-04 03:17 PM)
The papacy is not, in theory, a man-made office at all. Its holder is chosen for life, by God himself, to hold the keys of Peter and to be the vicar of Christ on earth. This is yet another of the self-imposed tortures that faith inflicts upon itself.
(Published: 2005-03-13 08:46 PM)
book review and interview with Reul Marc Gerecht
(Published: 2005-03-09 02:57 AM)
Middle East/North Africa Report N°37
2 March 2005.
Reacting to the spectacular and violent events of 11 September 2001, many Western observers and policy-makers have tended to lump all forms of Islamism together, brand them as radical and treat them as hostile. That approach is fundamentally misconceived. [pdf file]
(Published: 2005-03-06 11:23 PM)
ICG MIddle East report No 31.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Saudi Arabia is at a critical stage in both its struggle against terrorism and its on-again, off-again efforts at reform, and Islamism is at the heart of both. The success or failure of the moderate Islamists in providing social, religious and political responses to the country's predicament will, probably as much as anything, determine the ultimate fate of their radical rivals. (pdf file)