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The Jihadist Next Door
By ANDREA ELLIOTT
January 30, 2010
Print: New York Times
This in-depth article tells the story of the transformation of Omar Hammami from a very Americanized child growing up in Alabama into a radical jihadist in Somalia.
Bill and Melinda Gates make $10bn vaccine pledge
January 30, 2010
Print: BBC News
Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his wife Melinda have said they will donate $10bn (£6.2bn) over the next 10 years to develop and deliver new vaccines.
India’s Groupthink on Islam
By SADANAND DHUME
January 29, 2010
Print: Wall Street Journal
Dutch-Somali writer and activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali speaks out against Islam at a book fair in India.
Pig Heads Thrown Into Grounds of Malaysian Mosques
By Barry Porter
January 29, 2010
Print: Bloomberg News
In the latest incident reflecting rising tensions between Muslims and non-Muslims in Malaysia, pig heads were thrown onto the grounds of a mosque. Until recently, Malaysia has been one of the more moderate Islamic nations, with largely peaceful interfaith relations.
Fundamentalists and the Atheists Who Love Them
Ross Douthat
January 27, 2010
Print: New York Times
N.Y. Times columnist attacks Richard Dawkins for saying that Pat Robertson’s views on Haiti represent orthodox Christianity.
Humanist chaplains head to the UK
John Crace
January 25, 2010
Print: The Guardian
There is a slow realization of the need for non-religious “chaplains”.
Between God and a Hard Place
By JAMES WOOD
January 24, 2010
Print: New York Times
In a New York Times Op-Ed, author James Wood discusses theodicy in the context of the Haitian earthquake.
How Focus on the Family Bought a Super Bowl Spot
Brian Steinberg
January 20, 2010
Advertising Age
Focus on the Family, a Christian organization, will run a commercial during the Super Bowl, even though networks have often rejected potentially controversial Super Bowl ads in the past, such as an ad from PETA in 2009 and an ad from Moveon.org in 2004.
Teacher With Bible Divides Ohio Town
By IAN URBINA
January 20, 2010
Print: New York Times
Controversy over the firing of an aggressively proselytizing Christian science teacher in Ohio.
U.S. Military Weapons Inscribed with Secret “Jesus” Bible Codes
by Joseph Rhee, Tahman Bradley and Brian Ross
January 19, 2010
Print: ABC News
Coded references to New Testament Bible passages about Jesus Christ are inscribed on high-powered rifle sights provided to the U.S. military by a Michigan company, an ABC News investigation has found. Biblical citations inscribed on U.S. military weapons is an apparent reference to Second Corinthians 4:6 of the New Testament that reads “For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.”
Mauritanian Muslim leaders ban female circumcision
AP
January 18, 2010
Print: Gulf News
A group of 30 Mauritanian Muslim leaders have issued a religious edict banning female genital mutilation in the West African country. Shaikh Ould Zain, head of the Forum of Islamic Thought, says the scholars believe cutting young girls’ genitals to limit their sexual activity as women is against religious beliefs. He said the leaders also agreed to preach against the practice at their mosques.
Kyrgyzstan keeps a tight grip on religion
Martin Vennard
January 18, 2010
BBC
Authorities in Kyrgyzstan keep a tight grip on religion, fearing both Christian and Muslim fundamentalism. Bolot, a young evangelical preacher in Kyrgyzstan, says he already been arrested twice this year after setting up a new church. He says he is the victim of a new law on religion, which critics say severely restricts religious freedoms and is forcing some groups underground. Under the law, new religious groups have to have at least 200 members before they can register with the authorities and operate legally - previously the figure was 10.
Freedom must apply to all faiths and none
Shami Chakrabarti
January 18, 2010
Times Online
You may remember the story of Nadia Eweida, the British Airways check-in worker who was banned from wearing a small cross on a chain. This modest manifestation of her faith was as important to her as a turban or hijab to other workers. Yet the airline accommodated these other items without, perhaps, embracing the underlying values that would have protected Ms Eweida and anyone else from the blundering assertion that “rules is rules is rules”. After a public outcry that included secular, religious and political voices from across the spectrum, the airline modified its uniform policy. But not before Ms Eweida had been off work for months without pay, and crucially, without accepting the ethical and legal principle that would protect her and others of all faiths and none in the future. Worse still, BA instructed an international law firm strenuously to resist her claim of religious discrimination.
Atheist Richard Dawkins aids Haiti, touts God-free giving
by Cathy Lynn Grossman
January 17, 2010
Print: USAToday
Richard Dawkins is spearheading a fundraising drive for Haiti.
White House Adviser Valerie Jarrett ‘Speechless’ Over Pat Robertson’s Haiti Comment
By CLAIRE SHIPMAN and DEVIN DWYER
January 14, 2010
Print: ABC News
Robertson Says Haiti’s Earthquake Result of Haitians’ ‘Deal With Devil’
What Came First in the Origin of Life? New Study Contradicts the ‘Metabolism First’ Hypothesis
ScienceDaily
January 10, 2010
Print: ScienceDaily
A new study published in Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences rejects the theory that the origin of life stems from a system of self-catalytic molecules capable of experiencing Darwinian evolution without the need of RNA or DNA and their replication. The research has demonstrated that, through the analysis of what some researchers name “compound genomes,” these chemical networks cannot be considered evolutionary units because they lose properties which are essential for evolution when they reach a critical size and greater level of complexity.
Rare Breeds, Frozen in Time
By BARRY ESTABROOK
January 6, 2010
Print: New York Times
Our last article in this section was about the origins of the Noah’s Ark myth. This article is about efforts to create a real-life Noah’s ark by collecting and safeguarding frozen embryos of rare breeds.
Prejudiced Danes provoke fanaticism
by Nancy Graham Holm
January 5, 2010
Print: The Guardian
Nancy Graham Holm defends murder over free speach. “Publishing Kurt Westergaard’s cartoon was an aggressive act born of Denmark’s reluctance to respect religious belief”
Tiger, forget Buddhism, find Christ: Brit Hume on Fox
By Cathy Lynn Grossman
January 3, 2010
Print: USA Today
Brit Hume joins others leaders in giving Tiger Woods religious advice.
There Will Be Blood: The religious and political significance of Ashura
BY DAVID KENNER
January 3, 2010
Print: Foreign Policy
Self-flagellation makes the Shiite holiday of Ashura the bloodiest holiday in the world.









