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Posts published in “General”

French Amendments Threaten Muslim Women’s Rights

People around the world are protesting the French Senate’s decision to pass two amendments curbing Muslim women’s ability to wear a hijab. The hijab, a headscarf some Muslim women wear, has been a subject of controversy in France for decades. In 2004, students were banned from wearing the hijab in French public schools. Later, in 2010, France banned people from…

Ramble On: A Conversation with an American Expatriate Living in Portugal

Photo: E.V. Legters left the U.S. for Portugal in 2017. Credit: https://www.essential-business.pt/2020/08/26/portuguese-citizenship-applications-at-all-time-high/ E.V. Legters is an American fiction writer and former English teacher. In 2017, she left America for Coimbra, Portugal. The U.S. Department of State estimates that Legters is one of 10 million Americans living abroad, and one of nearly 7,000 living in Portugal. Last week, Editor Harrison Kass…

Turkey’s Exit from Domestic Violence Treaty Fuels National Outrage

Last week, Turkey announced its withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention, a fundamental European treaty that aims to prevent and combat domestic violence and other types of violence against women. As a result, thousands of people took to the streets of Turkish cities such as Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir on Saturday to protest.  The country become angrier after the trending Turkish…

AstraZeneca Vaccine Injections Resume in Most of Europe, Not Yet Approved in U.S.

Photo: The AstraZeneca vaccine will now come with a warning label. Credit: https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/after-reports-blood-clots-some-countries-pause-use-astrazeneca-covid-n1260888 UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and French Prime Minister Jean Castex are rolling up their sleeves to receive their first jabs of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in an effort to restore public trust in it. A handful of patients reported experiencing blood clots after getting their AstraZeneca coronavirus…