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Bringing China and Islam Closer: The First Chinese Azharites
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Bringing China and Islam Closer: The First Chinese Azharites

    In the 1930s, several groups of Muslim students from China arrived to study at Al-Azhar University in Cairo. They were destined to play an important role in the history of modern Chinese Islam. These 35 Chinese Azharites, all but two from the Sinophone Hui community, helped China to establish lasting links with Egypt and other Muslim countries in the Middle East. They also left a considerable cultural legacy, including translations of crucial texts from both the Islamic and Chinese traditions.

    April 28, 2015

    Cairo’s Townhouse Gallery: Social Transformation through Art
  • Analysis
  • Cairo’s Townhouse Gallery: Social Transformation through Art

    As the urban historian Lewis Mumford pointed out, “When a city has reached the megapolitan stage, it is plainly on the downward path: it needs a terrific exertion of social force to overcome the inertia, to alter the direction of the movement, to resist the immanent processes of disintegration.”[1]

    April 27, 2015

    When it Comes to Israeli Occupation, Better is Not Good Enough
  • Analysis
  • When it Comes to Israeli Occupation, Better is Not Good Enough

    Palestinians, beset by calamities at every turn, have all but ceased to think about their indeterminate prospects for independence and freedom. This dismal state of affairs suits Israel’s newly reelected Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fine. His opposition to a sovereign Palestinian state, broadcast in word and deed, leaves little room for doubt.

    The bar has been set so low that all concerned are searching for any shred of evidence that merely hints at better times for Palestinians, who have now lived under Israeli rule for almost a half century.

    April 21, 2015

    Rebuilding the U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relationship
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Rebuilding the U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relationship

    President Obama’s decision to lift the freeze on delivery of military aid to Egypt was the right thing to do to shore up a key strategic alliance in a region where risks to U.S. security are multiplying rapidly. The United States needs Egypt’s help in confronting terrorist and conventional threats in the region, in maintaining Arab-Israeli stability, and as a key player in Arab diplomacy and coalition building.

    A Delayed Transition: Egypt’s Suspended Elections
  • Analysis
  • A Delayed Transition: Egypt’s Suspended Elections

    In March, Egypt’s Supreme Administrative Court suspended the country’s long-awaited parliamentary elections,[1] originally scheduled to begin March 21.

    April 7, 2015

    Egypt’s Energy Potential
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Energy Potential

    Egypt is not out of the dark, but there is reason to be hopeful. The nation’s energy market reforms and consistent debt repayments have won the attention and approval of international energy companies and investors in the form of significant investment in the Egyptian energy sector. New upstream (exploration and production) oil and gas contracts, a recent increase in renewable energy ventures, and dozens of additional preliminary agreements in both the hydrocarbon and utility sectors are proof of the improved investment climate.

    April 7, 2015

    Israeli Elections and U.S. Policy Reevaluation: What Lies Ahead?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Israeli Elections and U.S. Policy Reevaluation: What Lies Ahead?

    The Obama administration has lost all patience with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s defiant challenges to two basic U.S. goals: a two-state Israeli-Palestinian peace and a nuclear deal with Iran. Netanyahu’s hostility and the emergence after the March 15 elections of a new, more right-wing coalition, have triggered a major crisis in relations and an apparent decision by Obama to “reevaluate” U.S. policy.

    March 30, 2015

    The Egypt Economic Development Conference: Success or Failure?
  • Analysis
  • The Egypt Economic Development Conference: Success or Failure?

    Saudi Arabia’s late King Abdullah first conceived of the Egypt Economic Development Conference (EEDC) as a means of supporting Egypt and its new government after the toppling of President Mohamed Morsi in June 2013. The plan was to provide a forum through which donors could coordinate their economic assistance, and lengthy preparations finally culminated in a well-organized event on March 13-15.

    March 26, 2015

    The Egyptian Family House: Fostering Religious Unity
  • Analysis
  • The Egyptian Family House: Fostering Religious Unity

    Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has not been shy about the need to reform religious discourse and relations.[1] He is concerned about how the image of Islam has been marred by Muslims themselves, and how extremist thought has torn the fabric of Muslim-Christian unity. Visiting the Coptic Orthodox cathedral on Christmas Eve, he told the cheering audience, “We will build Egypt together.

    March 24, 2015

    Collection Spotlight: In the Name of Oil: Anglo-American Relations in the Middle East, 1950-1958
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Collection Spotlight: In the Name of Oil: Anglo-American Relations in the Middle East, 1950-1958

     Ivan L. G. Pearson’s In the Name of Oil: Anglo-American Relations in the Middle East, 1950-1958 provides a comprehensive analysis of the extent to which British interests in the Middle East influenced or were furthered by the United States between 1950 and 1958.

    March 20, 2015

    Opening the Borders: A Better Plan for Gaza
  • Analysis
  • Opening the Borders: A Better Plan for Gaza

    The Middle East is in disarray, but in Gaza, of all places, there are fragile hints of better days.

    Two weeks ago, for the first time since Hamas’s takeover of the Gaza Strip in 2007, Israel permitted produce exports from Gaza into Israel and the West Bank.

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair acknowledged Gaza’s plight during a visit to the area in February.

    March 20, 2015

    The Israeli Elections: What Happened, What Didn’t
  • Analysis
  • The Israeli Elections: What Happened, What Didn’t

    Those Israelis who hoped for a change in Israel’s direction awoke this morning to news worse than they had feared. With more than 99 percent of the vote reportedly counted, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party has won 30 seats to 24 for his main challenger, the Zionist Union’s Isaac Herzog.

    March 18, 2015

    The Egypt Economic Conference: Q&A with Hoda Selim
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Egypt Economic Conference: Q&A with Hoda Selim

    Egypt’s Economic Development Conference will be held in Sharm el-Sheikh March 13-15, 2015. The conference aims to lay out the Egyptian government’s economic vision and plans for reform and position Egypt as a desirable destination for international investment. We spoke with Hoda Selim, an economist at Egypt’s Economic Research Forum, about the country’s current economic position and how the conference could help.  

    March 12, 2015