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  • Kenza Drider, at right, candidate for the 2012 French presidential election, talks to her spokeswoman Hind Ahmas on Dec. 12, 2011, in front of the police tribunal in Paris, after both women were fined for violating France's niqab ban. In France, a woman who repeatedly insists on appearing veiled in public can be fined 150 euros and ordered to attend re-education classes.
    Kenza Drider, at right, candidate for the 2012 French presidential election, talks to her spokeswoman Hind Ahmas on Dec. 12, 2011, in front of the police tribunal in Paris, after both women were fined for violating France's niqab ban. In France, a woman who repeatedly insists on appearing veiled in public can be fined 150 euros and ordered to attend re-education classes.
    Arts & Letters section icon
    Islamophobia and Post-Colonial Guilt

    Pascal Bruckner’s ‘brave and necessary’ new book examines how Muslims came to be known as victims of the West

    byDavid Mikics
  • Author Kamel Daoud speaks via Skype during a reading at the Lit.Cologne international literature festival in Cologne, Germany, 13 March 2016.
    Author Kamel Daoud speaks via Skype during a reading at the Lit.Cologne international literature festival in Cologne, Germany, 13 March 2016.
    Arts & Letters section icon
    The Daoud Affair

    How Western intellectuals turn themselves into the enemies of an entire class of liberal writers from Muslim backgrounds

    byPaul Berman
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