Law and Religion Headlines


Saturday, 21 July 2018

Palestinians outraged at Jewish nation-state law
(Daoud Kuttab, Al-Monitor: Palestine Pulse)

Netanyahu flip-flops on surrogacy rights for gay men
(Mazal Mualem, Al-Monitor: Israel Pulse)

Why Israel wants Trump to get along with Putin
(Jonathan S. Tobin, The Christian Post)

Australia's Catholic priests urge pope to sack Adelaide archbishop Philip Wilson
(Australian Associated Press, The Guardian)

Uniting church in Australia changes marriage definition to include same-sex couples
(John Paul Sunico, The Christian Post)

Philippines deports 71-year-old Australian nun
(Kelly Frazier, World Religion News)

When cultural relativists defend human sacrifice
(Eric Metaxas & G. Shane Morris, The Christian Post)

India: suspected vigilantes kill Muslim man transporting cows
(Agencies in New Delhi, The Guardian)

U.S. pastor still being held in a Turkish jail
(Gary Nguyen, World Religion News)

North Carolina pastor still imprisoned in Turkey after hearing
(Lauren Sanchez, Christian Headlines)

Rescued Thai soccer players consider becoming Buddhist monks to honor Navy Seal
(Nathan Glover, World Religion News)

Friday, 20 July 2018

Mobs are killing Muslims in India. Why is no one stopping them?
(Rana Ayyub, The Guardian)

China: Xinjiang’s children in orphanages as their parents held in re-education camps
(World Watch Monitor)

Anti-Christian violence in India’s Uttar Pradesh ‘part of the state machinery’
(Tejaswi Ravinder, World Watch Monitor)

Humanae Vitae: Sex and authority in the Catholic Church
(Thomas Reese, Religion News Service)

Trinidad and Tobago’s religious leaders call on government to uphold anti-LGBT laws
(Melissa Williams-Sambrano, Religion News Service)

Armenia's uprising spreads to its church
(Grigor Atanesian, Eurasia Net)

Uzbekistan: Criminal prosecution for sharing beliefs
(Forum 18 News Service)

Jehovah's Witnesses' lawyer describes their case in Siberia
(Viktoria Li, MBKh Media)

Christian college in India attacked by a mob; teachers, staff assaulted
(Nirmala Carvalho, Crux: Taking the Catholic Pulse)

LatAm debunks persistent myth about anti-Christian persecution
(John L. Allen Jr., Crux: Taking the Catholic Pulse)

Israel detains conservative rabbi for performing non-Orthodox weddings
(Aaron Rabinowitz, Josh Breiner and Noa Shpigel, Haaretz)

Israel's first enforcement of law barring Jewish weddings outside official rabbinate
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Duterte’s drug war killed thousands, and Filipinos still loved him. Then he called God ‘stupid.’
(Kristine Phillips, The Washington Post)

Why teaching kids to respect religious differences can change the world
(Kelsey Dallas, Deseret News Faith)

Podcast: Former Canadian Ambassador for Religious Freedom, the Rev. Dr. Andrew Bennett
(Matthew Hawkins and Travis Wussow, The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission)

Russian government tightens control of unregistered religious activity
(Interfax-Religiia, Russia Religion News)

Israel 'nation-state' law prompts criticism around the world, including from U.S. Jewish groups
(Paul Goldman, Lawahez Jabari and F. Brinley Bruton, ABC News)

Thursday, 19 July 2018

Latin American bishops announce day of prayer for Nicaragua
(Catholic News Agency)

Nicaragua’s bishops to pray for exorcism amid Ortega crackdown
(Inés San Martín, Crux: Taking the Catholic Pulse)

'Cease State violence and protect the people,' WCC tells Nicaragua
(Peter Kenny, Ecumenical News)

Catholic church in UAE to host fatherhood celebration for migrant workers
(Perry West, Catholic News Agency)

Hopes dashed for release of pastor Andrew Brunson as Turkish trial to continue in October
(World Watch Monitor)

US pastor denied release in latest trial hearing in Turkey
(Associated Press)

Turkey ends state of emergency, but introduces restrictive new rules
(Ayla Jean Yackley, Al-Monitor: Turkey Pulse)

Turkey formally arrests televangelist, scores of followers
(Associated Press)

Israeli law declares the country the ‘nation-state of the Jewish people’
(David M. Halbfinger and Isabel Kershner, The New York Times)

Controversial law cements Israel’s status as a Jewish state
(Michele Chabin, Religion News Service)

Israel passes watered-down version of controversial Jewish nation-state bill
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Israel passes controversial Jewish nation-state bill after stormy debate
(Jonathan Lis and Noa Landau, Haaretz)

Israeli legislators strip Arabic of official language status
(Shiomi Eldar, Al-Monitor: Israel Pulse)

Israel in turmoil over bill allowing Jews and Arabs to be segregated
(Oliver Holmes, The Guardian)

Israel shoots herself in the foot
(Jeffrey Salkin, RNS Column: Martini Judaism (for those who want to be shaken and stirred))

Netanyahu’s Israel will know no peace
(Akiva Eldar, Al-Monitor: Israel Pulse)

Does Israel really need to be in a state of emergency?
(Yossi Beilin, Al-Monitor: Israel Pulse)

Israeli police detain liberal rabbi over ‘illegal’ weddings
(Associated Press)

LGBT community in uproar after Knesset passes surrogacy law that excludes single men and gay couples
(Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Orthodox mob harasses teenage girl in Jerusalem suburb over ‘immodest’ clothing
(Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Archbishop of Canterbury raises profile of Nigeria attacks as new humanitarian crisis looms
(Illia Djadi, World Watch Monitor)

Renewal of anti-terror law threatens human rights in Iraqi Kurdistan
(Fazel Hawramy, Al-Monitor: Iraq Pulse)

ISIS is making a comeback in Iraq just months after Baghdad declared victory
(Liz Sly and Mustafa Salim, The Washington Post)

Iraq struggles to provide war orphans with identities
(Adnan Abu Zeed, Al-Monitor: Iraq Pulse)

Parliament puts a price on Egyptian citizenship
(Shahira Amin, Al-Monitor: Egypt Pulse)

Play challenges deadly Egyptian wedding night tradition
(Amr Mostafa, Al-Monitor: Egypt Pulse)

Egypt's activists fear social media law is anti-social
(Menna A Farouk, Al-Monitor: Egypt Pulse)

Coptic woman details horrors of living as Christian female in Egypt: 'It's hell'
(Samuel Smith, The Christian Post)

Too-perfect storyline: El Salvador criminal gangs gain respect of evangelical churches, let members go
(Bobby Ross Jr., GetReligion)

Pompeo shifts Russia focus to another issue: Religious freedom
(Elizabeth Dias, The New York Times)

Religious freedom can be protected with 'tweaks', says Ruddock review member
(Paul Karp, The Guardian)

Jehovah's Witnesses do not succeed in keeping property
(Interfax-Religiia, Russia Religion News)

Jehovah's Witnesses, fleeing Russia crackdown, seek shelter in Finland
(Andrew Higgins, The New York Times)

Jehovah's Witnesses couple denied appeal against pretrial detention
(Alexandra Kashtanova, Omsk Zdes)

Ufa Jehovah's Witness awaits trial
(Darya Kucherenko, ProUfu.ru)

Philippines orders Australian nun deported and blacklisted
(Jim Gomez, Associated Press)

Australian court bans niqab in spectator's gallery
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Patricia Fox: Australian nun who angered Duterte ordered to leave Philippines
(Associated Press, The Guardian)

Australian prime minister calls on pope to fire archbishop
(Rod McGuirk, Associated Press)

Uneasy heritage: Australia's modern church buildings are disappearing
(Lisa Marie Daunt, CNN)

Victorian judge bans niqab in court's public gallery
(Calla Wahlquist, The Guardian)

Anti-Semitism: Journalistically parsing its current upsurge both here and abroad
(Ira Rifkin, GetReligion)

Perennial issue whenever journalists write about religion: Which Bible to quote?
(Richard Ostling, GetReligion)

Wednesday, 18 July 2018

Investigating a Catholic school body is no dark conspiracy
(Samantha Maiden, The Guardian)

Shock over ruling that 'brides of Christ' need not be virgins
(Harriet Sherwood, The Guardian)

Organ donation: we can break taboos among British BAME communities
(Nishtha Chugh, The Guardian)

Iran and Saudi Arabia fight war of words over Muslim holy sites
(Kelly Frazier, World Religion News)

Chad: Sultan in Christian and Animist South is ‘threat for peace’
(World Watch Monitor)

Vatican-OK’d journal strikes out again at US evangelicals
(Nicole Winfield, Religion News Service)

Is China’s atheist Communist Party trying to eradicate Islam?
(Agence France-Presse, South China Morning Post)

Non-religious countries experience greater economic growth, study finds
(Josh Gabbatiss, The Independent)

Uzbekistan: More legal personality restrictions imposed
(Forum 18 News Service)

Israeli parliament to vote on contentious Nation State bill
(Associated Press)

India’s Supreme Court warns of ‘mobocracy,’ urges government to pass anti-lynching law after deadly attacks
(Annie Gowen, The Washington Post)

Indigenous peoples are crucial for conservation – a quarter of all land is in their hands
(The Conversation)

CRA loses court challenge to its political-activity audits of charities
(Dean Beeby, CBC News)

Just Published: Findings from the Under Caesar’s Sword Project on the Persecution of Christians
(Daniel Philpott, Arc of the Universe: Ethics and Global Justice)

The Brunson farce (Turkey’s indictment against American Pastor Andrew Brunson reveals why charges against him shouldn’t hold up in any legitimate court)
(Aykan Erdemir and Merve Tahiroglu, World Magazine)

Tuesday, 17 July 2018

Egypt: Mob attack encouraged by police promise ‘No church will be allowed here’
(World Watch Monitor)

Religion not a criteria for recruitment in paramilitary forces: MHA
(Free Press Journal India)

Presbyterian Church committed to partner Government for skills development
(Ghana Web)

Why Australians’ religious freedom is worth protecting
(Denis Dragovic, The Conversation)

Russia's royal martyrs: The commemoration of an act of regicide falls short of expectations
(Erasmus, The Economist [Erasmus: Religion and public policy])

India inspects all Missionaries of Charity care homes after baby-selling scandal
(Nirmala Carvalho, Crux: Taking the Catholic Pulse)

Missionaries of Charity complain of ‘baseless innuendos’ as government orders probe
(Anto Akkara & World Watch Monitor staff, World Watch Monitor)

India’s top court calls for new law to curb mob violence
(Aijaz Hussain, Associated Press)

Cows are sacred to India’s Hindu majority. For Muslims who trade cattle, that means growing trouble
(Annie Gowen, The Washington Post)

India on brink of biggest gay rights victory as Supreme Court prepares to rule on gay sex ban
(Adam Withnall, The Independent)

First Orthodox monastery opens in Japan
(Interfax-Religion)

Monday, 16 July 2018

Algerian government allows three churches to re-open in June, but now closes another
(World Watch Monitor)

The rise and rise of Hillsong, and what other Australian churches should learn from them
(Riza Casidy, The Conversation)

Indianness is the religion of Congress: Surjewala on PM Modi's 'Muslim party' remark
(Times of India)

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