On Being Blog

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask + we'll answer!
  • Get Published on the On Being Blog
What Does This Photo of Men and Women Praying Together in Tahrir Square Signify?
by Nancy Rosenbaum, producer
On February 1st, this photograph was posted on Twitter with the caption:

“In Tahrir Square in Cairo, men and women pray together just like at the  Haram in Makkah, gender boundaries have been transcended and the only  thing that matters is that they are Egyptians who want freedom!”

To see Muslim women and men praying next to each other in an Egyptian public square is worthy of noting. We wonder what it suggests about bigger changes afoot in Egypt? We reached out to commentators Melody Moezzi and Mona Eltahawy via Twitter for some context and perspective.
Moezzi replied: “In the time of the Prophet, men and women prayed side by side. Today in Mecca, men and women pray side by side. This should be good enough for the rest of the world then — to end segregation in mosques and in prayer. That’s what the comment is getting at.”
Eltahaway reached out to her broad sphere of followers on Twitter. One of Eltahaway’s Twitter followers added (with a smiley emoticon appended to the end:  “The segregation angle comes into play only when you are inside a mosque. Believe it or not, Islam is a flexible religion.”
What do you see in the photograph that might add to our understanding? Do you have other insights that might train our eyes to see differently? Are there details to which we should pay greater attention, which, in turn, would add to its meaning and significance?
(photo: S. Habib/Twitpic)
View Separately

What Does This Photo of Men and Women Praying Together in Tahrir Square Signify?

by Nancy Rosenbaum, producer

On February 1st, this photograph was posted on Twitter with the caption:

“In Tahrir Square in Cairo, men and women pray together just like at the Haram in Makkah, gender boundaries have been transcended and the only thing that matters is that they are Egyptians who want freedom!”

To see Muslim women and men praying next to each other in an Egyptian public square is worthy of noting. We wonder what it suggests about bigger changes afoot in Egypt? We reached out to commentators Melody Moezzi and Mona Eltahawy via Twitter for some context and perspective.

Moezzi replied: “In the time of the Prophet, men and women prayed side by side. Today in Mecca, men and women pray side by side. This should be good enough for the rest of the world then — to end segregation in mosques and in prayer. That’s what the comment is getting at.”

Eltahaway reached out to her broad sphere of followers on Twitter. One of Eltahaway’s Twitter followers added (with a smiley emoticon appended to the end: “The segregation angle comes into play only when you are inside a mosque. Believe it or not, Islam is a flexible religion.”

What do you see in the photograph that might add to our understanding? Do you have other insights that might train our eyes to see differently? Are there details to which we should pay greater attention, which, in turn, would add to its meaning and significance?

(photo: S. Habib/Twitpic)

Source: twitpic.com

    • #Islam
    • #prayer
    • #Tahrir Square
    • #Egypt
    • #Muslim
    • #photography
  • 2 years ago [Wed, Feb 9th, 2011 at 5:26am]
  • 19 notes
  • comments
  • Share

19 Notes/ Hide

  1. bosch-pfs-65 reblogged this from beingblog
  2. tchilaquered likes this
  3. mariahskaaa likes this
  4. xxxlonelystarxxx reblogged this from mollymillions
  5. senjensenjensen reblogged this from mollymillions
  6. nerd-gasms likes this
  7. senjensenjensen likes this
  8. mollymillions reblogged this from drwh0
  9. highsee likes this
  10. drwh0 reblogged this from beingblog
  11. thegreatpumpkin likes this
  12. bibliosaurus likes this
  13. seajee likes this
  14. harri-teikkas-psych-out likes this
  15. theoceanwithin likes this
  16. hierology reblogged this from beingblog
  17. beingblog posted this

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

Portrait/Logo

About

On Being with Krista Tippett is a public radio project delving into the human side of news stories + issues. Curated + edited by senior editor Trent Gilliss.

We publish guest contributions. We edit long; we scrapbook. We do big ideas + deep meaning. We answer questions.

We've even won a couple of Webbys + a Peabody Award.

Our Social Spaces

  • @Beingtweets on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • being on Vimeo
  • speakingoffaith on Youtube
  • speakingoffaith on Flickr
  • onbeing on Soundcloud

Following

Posts We Like

  • Photo via laughingsquid

    Inorganic Flora, A Collection of Detailed Botanical Blueprints

    Photo via laughingsquid
  • Quote via theantidote
    “What is it we are questing for? It is the fulfillment of that which is potential in each of us. Questing for it is not an ego trip; it is an...”
    Quote via theantidote
  • Photo via laughingsquid

    The Periodic Table of Middle Earth, A Scientific Chart of ‘Lord of the Rings’ Characters

    Photo via laughingsquid
  • Audio post via midseminarylifecrisis
    • Creativity and the Everyday Brain
    • On Being with Krista Tippett
    • On Being with Krista Tippett
    Play

    beingblog:

    How do we prime our brains to take the meandering mental paths necessary for creativity? New techniques of brain imaging, ...

    Audio post via midseminarylifecrisis
See more →
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask + we'll answer!
  • Get Published on the On Being Blog
  • Mobile

American Public Media. Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr