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Fahmi Huwaidi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fahmi Huwaidi (Arabic: فهمي هويدي; born 29 August 1937 in El Saff, Giza Governorate) is an Egyptian columnist. A "moderate Islamist",[1] he writes for Al Jazeera and the Egyptian opposition newspaper Al-Dustour. He has been called "probably the most widely read Islamic political analyst".[2]

In 2006, he stopped writing for Al-Ahram, for which he had written for 48 years, complaining that words had been omitted from his weekly column.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad (1994). "Current Arab Paradigms for an Islamic Future". In Tobin Anthony Siebers (ed.). Religion and the Authority of the Past. University of Michigan Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-472-08259-9.
  2. ^ Raouf Ebeid, God’s Authority v. Power to the People: The Views of Influential Islamic Writers, Political Islam Online, 1 March 2010
  3. ^ Al-Ahram Egyptian Newspaper Fires Its Great Writers Archived 18 February 2013 at archive.today, Ikhwanweb, 22 May 2006