The Documentary Podcast Heart and Soul: The mosque for Bangladesh's transgender women
Reporter Sahar Zand has gained rare access to this community, spending time with its leader, Tanu - a transgender woman and practising Muslim - who has built a sanctuary where hijras can reconnect with faith. At the heart of this transformation is a Quran study group, offering hijras the religious education they were long denied, and a newly built mosque - the first in Bangladesh to welcome them as equals, after they were expelled from others. With the help of an imam who risked everything to stand by them, they are reclaiming their right to Islam.
But as religious conservatism rises, so do the threats against them. Their village is no longer just a refuge; it is the frontline of a battle for acceptance. Can faith be the key to breaking barriers, or will they be forced back into the shadows?

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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
TikToker claims he scrapped 'painful' Kamala Harris interview because he would have been blamed for election loss
Comedian and TikTok star Kareem Rahma is dishing more details on why he scrapped a sought-after interview with then-presidential candidate Kamala Harris days before the election. He shared with Forbes reporter Steven Bertoni that the interview was so 'painful' that it could have resulted in her blaming him for losing the election. Rahma had traveled to Pittsburgh to meet the vice president after her team said he could interview Harris for his online show Subway Takes, a series featuring travelers on a New York City subway who had a 'take' on a specific issue. The Daily Mail reported in November that Rahma became wary of the opportunity after he was told he could not ask questions about the Israeli war in Gaza. But despite the complications with organizing the interview topics, he ultimately went forward with it. Rahma revealed in the New York Times that there was a dispute with Harris and her team about the 'take' that she was willing to share. He said he was told by staffers that Harris would be giving a 'take' on whether people should remove their shoes on airplanes. But when he sat down with Harris, Rahma said that she had a different idea. 'Bacon is a spice,' she insisted. He said he was told by staffers that Harris would be giving a 'take' on whether people should remove their shoes on airplanes. But when he sat down with Harris, Rahma said that she had a different idea. 'Bacon is a spice,' she insisted. As a Muslim, Rahma does not eat pork for religious reasons, and responded skeptically to her position. 'Think about it, it's pure flavor,' Harris continued, talking about the various different dishes that could be enhanced by bacon bits. When Rahma asked for a different take, Harris decided to declare her love of anchovies on pizza, after conferring with a staffer. Ultimately, he admitted that the interview had gone so badly that he decided not to publish it. 'It was so complicated because I'm Muslim and there's something going on in the world that 100 percent of Muslims care about,' he said. 'And then they made it worse by talking about anchovies. Boring!' Harris has revealed details about all three issues before, so his interview would not have been groundbreaking, had it been published. By contrast, Walz was still relatively unknown in August when Rahma deviated from his norm of interviewing his subjects on the NYC subway to travel and meet him on the trail. Walz's 'take' could not have come across as more Midwestern: home gutters. 'My take is the most neglected part of home ownership is the gutters,' Walz told Rahma. 'It's personal for me.' Harris' belief that 'Bacon is a spice,' meanwhile, is a take she flaunted in Iowa on the campaign trail in 2019. Her view about people removing shoes on airplanes is a take she revealed in April with the Had It or Hit It podcast and details about her love of anchovy pizza was celebrated in July as part of what fueled her process to seize the nomination after former President Joe Biden announced his decision to step down. The story illustrates a new window into Harris' closely guarded media access especially ongoing attempts to control content from social media influencers with preconditions to access. After catching a glimpse of the bizarre political world, he expressed his gratitude that he was not in the business of political media.


Scottish Sun
6 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I interviewed Kamala Harris before election but it was so weird it was destroyed – I didn't want blame for election loss
'REALLY, REALLY BAD' I interviewed Kamala Harris before election but it was so weird it was destroyed – I didn't want blame for election loss KAMALA Harris gave an interview before the election that was so "confusing and weird" it was immediately deleted, according to the social media personality who hosted it. The then-Democratic nominee's appearance on "Subway Takes", where guests admit their favourite hot take, would alone have lost her the election - so she and the host agreed to erase it. Advertisement 4 Kamala said something plainly inappropriate while appearing on the Subway Takes series Credit: AFP 4 Host Kareem Rahma has revealed what she said to make them delete the video Credit: TikTok / stevebertoni 4 Kamala's team reportedly offered to re-film the episode - but Kareem declined Credit: Getty Kareem Rahma, who hosts the series, has revealed he sat down with Kamala in summer last year, just months before November's election. He told Forbes in an interview posted to TikTok: "Her take was really confusing and weird, not good, and so [we] mutually agreed we shouldn't publish it." Kareem claims the Democratic Party reached out to him to say that Kamala and Tim Walz, her vice-president running partner, were "really interested" in being on the show. The presenter said he got "lucky", because he "didn't want to be blamed for her losing". Advertisement read more in us news TEEN 'KILLER' Girl, 17, hands herself into police over murder of mom and stepdad Doubling down, Kareem said Kamala's take was "really, really bad, and it didn't make any sense". Finally putting viewers out of their misery, he revealed that Kamala's take was "bacon as a spice". Kareem is a Muslim, meaning he can't eat pork-based products and has never eaten bacon - making it a particularly odd choice for Kamala to go with. Kareem previously showed footage of the awkward encounter to the New York Times - which reported he was "taken aback" by Kamala's statement. Advertisement The newspaper reported that she pushed on with: "Think about it, it's pure flavour." And it completely blind-sided the host. Kamala Harris bizarrely brings up viral elephant moment mid-speech but viewers convinced it's part of 2028 plot Kareem revealed back in November to the NYT that the bacon-spice was not the hot take originally pitched by Kamala's team. The democrats said she would be taking aim at people who remove their shoes on aeroplanes. Advertisement So when the misplaced pork take came along, he was baffled. Two senior campaign managers for Kamala said the topic of bacon had been previously raised with Kareem as a subject for the show, the paper reported, though the host and his manager refute this. Harris's campaign reportedly apologised for the blunder and offered to re-film the episode, but Kareem declined. Kareem previously said his main reason for not airing the interview was because he didn't want to upset the Muslim community by spending air time on trivial matters when something as serious as the Israel-Hamas war was ongoing. Advertisement He said: "It was so complicated because I'm Muslim and there's something going on in the world that 100% of Muslims care about. "And then they made it worse by talking about anchovies. Boring!" Whilst Kamala's interview never made it off the tape reel, Tim Walz's was posted in August 2024. He decided to talk about gutter maintenance. Advertisement


NBC News
7 hours ago
- NBC News
ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders over persecution of women and girls
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants Tuesday for the Taliban's supreme leader and the head of Afghanistan's Supreme Court on charges of persecuting women and girls since seizing power nearly four years ago. The warrants also accuse the leaders of persecuting "other persons nonconforming with the Taliban's policy on gender, gender identity or expression; and on political grounds against persons perceived as 'allies of girls and women.'" The warrants were issued against Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhunzada and the head of the Supreme Court, Abdul Hakim Haqqani. The court's prosecution office called the decision to issue warrants "an important vindication and acknowledgment of the rights of Afghan women and girls." It added that the judges' ruling "also recognizes the rights and lived experiences of persons whom the Taliban perceived as not conforming with their ideological expectations of gender identity or expression, such as members of the LGBTQI+ community, and persons whom the Taliban perceived as allies of girls and women." Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief spokesman for the Taliban government, rejected the court's authority. He said in a statement that the court's decision reflected "open hostility and hatred toward the holy religion of Islam and Shariah law," and is "an insult to the beliefs of all Muslims." The warrants came just hours after the United Nations adopted a resolution Monday over U.S. objections that called on the Taliban to reverse their worsening oppression of women and girls and eliminate all terrorist organizations. They are the latest high-profile suspects named in arrest warrants issued by The Hague-based court that also has sought the arrest of other leaders including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Since returning to power in Afghanistan in 2021, the Taliban have imposed harsh measures, banning women from public places and girls from attending school beyond the sixth grade. Last week, Russia became the first country to formally recognize the Taliban's government. The court said in a statement that the Taliban have "severely deprived, through decrees and edicts, girls and women of the rights to education, privacy and family life and the freedoms of movement, expression, thought, conscience and religion." The court's chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, sought the warrants in January, saying that they recognized that "Afghan women and girls as well as the LGBTQI+ community are facing an unprecedented, unconscionable and ongoing persecution by the Taliban." Global advocacy group Human Rights Watch welcomed the decision, and urged the international community to help enforce the court's warrants. "Senior Taliban leaders are now wanted men for their alleged persecution of women, girls, and gender-nonconforming people," Liz Evenson, the group's international justice director, said in a statement. ICC judges approved a request in 2022 from the prosecutor to reopen an investigation into Afghanistan. The probe was shelved after Kabul said it could handle the investigation. Khan said he wanted to reopen the inquiry because under the Taliban, there was "no longer the prospect of genuine and effective domestic investigations" in Afghanistan. Khan's predecessor, Fatou Bensouda, got approval in 2020 to start looking at offenses allegedly committed by Afghan government forces, the Taliban, American troops and U.S. foreign intelligence operatives dating back to 2002. When Khan reopened the probe, he said he would focus on crimes committed by the Taliban and the Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State group. He said he would "deprioritize" other aspects of the investigation, such as crimes committed by Americans. The warrants for Taliban leaders were issued while Khan has stepped down temporarily pending the outcome of an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct. Khan has categorically denied accusations that he tried for more than a year to coerce a female aide into a sexual relationship and groped her against her will.