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==The ex-Muslim movement== | ==The ex-Muslim movement== | ||
The fast-spreading ex-Muslim movements across the world is iconized by the ongoing establishment of ex-Muslim councils in countries as diverse as Pakistan, Iran, Jordan, Britain, Norway, Jordan, America, Canada, Morocco, and many others.<ref name=":0" /> Unlike the most other movements in and about Islam in the modern world, the ex-Muslim movement apparently enjoys the advantages of unity intrinsic to all movements which are primarily oppositional in nature and lack much if any of their own ideological content. | The fast-spreading ex-Muslim movements across the world is iconized by the ongoing establishment of ex-Muslim councils in countries as diverse as Pakistan, Iran, Jordan, Britain, Norway, Jordan, America, Canada, Morocco, and many others.<ref name=":0" /> Unlike the most other movements in and about Islam in the modern world, the ex-Muslim movement apparently enjoys the advantages of unity intrinsic to all movements which are primarily oppositional in nature and lack much if any of their own ideological content. Even while there has been collaboration between religiously unaffiliated ex-Muslims, ex-Muslim converts to Christianity, and critics of Islam from various faiths, however, that the largest part of the ex-Muslim movement identifies as part of the broader anti-religion, atheist, and agnostic movement spreading through the world can result in a slight, albeit by no means mutually exclusive, divergence of interests with groups and figures who identify with non-Islamic faiths. | ||
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