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COUNTRY

Egypt

POPULATION

83,688,164 (July 2012 est.)

GDP PER CAPITA

$6,600 (2011 est.)

RELIGIONS

Muslim (mostly Sunni) 90%, Coptic 9%, other Christian 1%


Egypt

Egypt

Letters (12)

The intersection of religion and politics in Egypt has been characterized by both gradual change and revolutionary rupture. Islam arrived in the 7th century CE, and Egypt emerged as a center of politics and culture in the Muslim world. British control during the late 19th and early 20th centuries allowed local and European intellectual traditions to mingle, contributing to the establishment of a nationalist, secular regime in the 1952 Revolution. Though Islam became the official state religion in 1971, Egyptian presidents largely continued to rule as they saw fit. In 2011, a popular revolution involving secular and religious actors ended 30 years of rule by Hosni Mubarak (1981-2011). The Muslim Brotherhood, which had previously been banned as a political party, won a majority of seats in the post-Revolution parliamentary elections, and the group’s political leader, Mohamed Morsi, was elected president. The Constitution grants freedom of religion, but authorities often restrict it in practice. Among those most directly affected are Coptic Christians, approximately 10% of the population.


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  • May 3, 2011
    It is often difficult to discuss France’s politics in terms of their relation to religion considering the fact that “laïcité,” or France’s strict relegation of religion to the private sphere, is tenaciously upheld as a national value, right up there with liberty, equality, and fraternity. France’s “laïcité” is very different from the United States’ separation of Church and State because it is much more skeptical of any and all intrusion of particular religions into national political culture....

  • April 14, 2011
    Just as the American government faces the standoff on budget reform, bringing Tea Party power to the fore, the headline ravaging Paris is the French’s own conservative ascendance. To the astonishment of France, Marine Le Pen, new leader of the far-right National Front party and daughter of famed Jean-Marie Le Pen, won a greater percentage than any other candidate in a poll by the Le Parisien newspaper. According to the survey—though its accuracy is being heavily questioned—Marine Le Pen would...

  • March 30, 2011
    For this post, I’ll step back briefly into a former major (IPOL/Security) and a former life (last semester in Turkey) to offer a few comments on the situation unfolding in the Middle East today, specifically in Libya. In a previous article, I argued that the “Jasmine Revolution” then happening in Tunisia and Egypt was something that should be cheered and encouraged by the United States. President Obama did eventually come out in support of the Egyptian people and demanded Hosni Mubarak step...

  • March 29, 2011
    Any elementary student of the Arabic language quickly confronts a daunting reality: learning Classical Arabic will not allow one to bargain in an Arab marketplace or direct a cab driver. Furthermore, one must acknowledge that the ability to communicate in one dialect may only make it possible to function effectively in one Arab nation. Thus, it is probable that knowledge of Moroccan darija will be less useful in Egypt than English. Proving to be irksome to foreign students of the language,...

  • February 23, 2011
    Though experts have been careful to point out that each set of popular protests has arisen in its own circumstances, at this point it is quite clear that the protests which have broken out in Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Libya and elsewhere are not just protests which coincidentally arose simultaneously. The connectedness is clear, even if it is as simple as the fact that potential protesters in Egypt knew that protesters in Tunisia had successfully toppled their president. Since the...

  • February 12, 2011
    After three weeks of protests, the Egyptian people have finally been heard. Throughout these past few weeks, the whole world has been focused on Egypt, and Jordan, being in the Middle East, has been no exception. Every night after classes I sit with my host parents and watch the news, and every night pictures of Cairo flash across the screen. No matter where I go in Amman, every restaurant, cab driver, and home has the television or radio set to news of the protests. Tonight, though, my...

  • February 6, 2011
    This year I had plans to spend the semester in Cairo, Egypt as a study abroad student. I fell in love with the city overnight. The people, the culture, the history, everything intrigued me.

    However, I arrived in Cairo at a historic period. A time in which all sites I had read about in travel guides the pyramids, the Egyptian museums, the old souqs were unseeable due to the curfew. It was also a time during which all the preconceptions I had learned about in class- Egypts lack of civil...

  • February 4, 2011
    Like too many of its neighboring (largely Arab) governments, the Egyptian regime has long been amongst the most repressive and democratically backward in the world. As anyone who has been even cursorily glancing at any serious front page(s) lately should know, President (for life) Hosni Mubarak's regime has been keeping a tight lid on the country for 30 years and pursuing the so-called kleptocratic practices that we in the U.S. so often decry in Russians and assume are inherent in Arabs....

  • January 30, 2011
    I arrived in Cairo ten days ago for study abroad. I was drawn to Egypt by its Pharonic history, contemporary political relevance, and its rich Islamic culture. However, ten days into my trip I cannot say that I have seen the pyramids, ridden a camel or taken a cruise on Nile. I can, however, say that I witnessed a potential revolution.

    With the precedent of Tunisia in mind, Egyptians have taken to streets to protest President Mubarak who has been in power for three decades holding elections...

  • October 22, 2010

    I came to Egypt expecting an onslaught of unfamiliar sights, sounds, and tastes--the rich experience of life in another culture. I was not naive enough to expect that my days would be filled with camels and Nile sunsets, but I also did not expect Egyptian culture to sometimes feel more American than America. For one thing, the prevalence of English in Cairo is quite striking, and signs in many parts of Cairo are as likely to be written in English as in Arabic. It is not uncommon to hear...


  • October 18, 2010
    From the ubiquitous call to prayer and celebratory car horns to the more intrusive taxi cab interrogations, one immediately recognizes that religion flows through the heart of Egypt just like the Nile river. Both Islam and Christianity, from Alexandria to Aswan, manifest themselves in a myriad of ways, demonstrating the all-encompassing role of faith in Egyptian society. In this country, the significance of one's occupation and wealth pale in comparison to the importance of one's religious...

  • October 12, 2010

    The prominent role that Islam plays in modern Egypt is hardly news; religion permeates nearly every corner of the public sphere in Cairo. Graffiti on apartment buildings proclaims God’s greatness, “Allah” stickers adorn Koshary stand windows, and taxi drivers fill their cabs with the drone of Quranic chanting. Public religious messages are particularly prominent in Egypt during Ramadan, a special season of fasting and religious focus for Muslims around the world. Television channels air...