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  2. Women's mosques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_mosques

    Xiaotaoyuan Women's Mosque in Shanghai, China. A women-only mosque in Byblos, Lebanon.. Women's mosques exist around the world, with a particularly rich tradition in China. As Islam has principles of segregating the sexes at times, many places of worship provide a dedicated prayer space for women within the main building, but in a few countries, separate buildings were constructed.

  3. Ibn Rushd-Goethe Mosque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Rushd-Goethe_Mosque

    Full-face veils as burqas or niqabs are not allowed. Men and women pray together in the mosque and women are not obligated to wear a headscarf. Furthermore, gay and lesbian Muslims are allowed to enter the mosque and can pray as well. It is the first mosque of its kind in Germany and one of the first in Europe as well as the entire world. [2 ...

  4. Women in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Islam

    Other Muslim-majority states with notably more women university students than men include Kuwait, where 41% of females attend university compared with 18% of males; [150] Bahrain, where the ratio of women to men in tertiary education is 2.18:1; [150] Brunei Darussalam, where 33% of women enroll at university vis à vis 18% of men; [150] Tunisia ...

  5. Inclusive Mosque Initiative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusive_Mosque_Initiative

    The beginning of IMI emerged from their frustrations with the situation for women in many British mosques, where often women’s sections do not exist and ‘sometimes the facilities for women are very inferior, cramped, and not at all conducive to the attitude of worship.’ [5] The Inclusive Mosque Initiative aims to offer alternative spaces ...

  6. Al-Muhaddithat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Muhaddithat

    Al-Muhaddithat: The Women Scholars in Islam is a book by Akram Nadwi, originally published in 2007. This work serves as an English introduction to his Arabic publication, Al-Wafa bi Asma al-Nisa, which consists of 43 volumes and focuses on the biographies of women scholars of hadith. Nadwi worked in this field of research for 15 years.

  7. Eve Bunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eve_Bunting

    Bunting then enrolled in a community college writing course. [4] Of her first published story, The Two Giants, she said, "I thought everybody in the world knew that story, and when I found they didn't - well, I thought they should." [5] Bunting died of pneumonia in Santa Cruz, California, on October 1, 2023, at the age of 94. [6]

  8. Khutbah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khutbah

    Such a mosque is referred to as a masjid jami‘, that is, a "Friday Mosque" (or a "cathedral mosque"). These mosques were distinguished by their central location, large dimensions, monumental architecture, symbolic furnishings indicative of its exalted stature, and, the most demonstrative of all, the minbar (ritual pulpit).

  9. Sherin Khankan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherin_Khankan

    The mosque opened in February 2016 and held its first formal service that August. Khankan gave the call to prayer and 60 women gathered above a fast food shop. Another imam, Saliha Marie Fetteh, took the service where she spoke on the subject of women and Islam. The new mosque has conducted several weddings.