Religion:Faith Freedom International

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Faith Freedom International
File:Faith freedom international -screenshot.jpg
Screenshot of FFI
Type of site
Anti-Islam
Available inEnglish, Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Polish, Spanish
OwnerAli Sina
Created byAli Sina
RevenueDonations
Websitehttp://www.faithfreedom.org
CommercialNo
RegistrationeNom, Inc. (R39-LROR)
LaunchedOctober 26, 2001

Faith Freedom International (FFI) is a website that is critical of Islam.

Website traffic and access

Ranking.com lists faithfreedom.org among the top 70,000 as measured by traffic as of January 2016.[1] According to Alexa, faithfreedom.org was among the top 650,000 websites as of June 2019.[2]

Ali Sina, the founder of FFI, has remarked that the website received over 10 million readers in just over a 2.5-year time span while being banned in a number of countries including Iran and Pakistan.[3] A 2002 study on internet filtering in Saudi Arabia identified FFI as among the web pages that were blocked in the country.[4]

The site has been hacked and subject to DDOS attacks several times since the website opened, most recently in January 2010.[citation needed]

Content

Articles

The website contains several articles authored by notable persons, including:


  • Cherie Blair[5]
  • Steven Emerson[6]
  • Fjordman[7]
  • Robert Spencer[8]
  • Geert Wilders[9]
  • Eric Allen Bell[10]


Debates

The website includes several debates between Ali Sina and Muslims, among them are prominent scholars such as Edip Yuksel and Yamin Zakaria of ICSSA. [citation needed]

Appendix Appearances

FFI is listed by Richard Dawkins in the appendix of his book, The God Delusion, as one of the few Islamic related "friendly address[es], for individuals needing support in escaping from religion."[11] FFI's mission statement is included in the appendix of Ibn Warraq's book Leaving Islam: Apostates Speak Out.[12]

See also

  • Ali Sina (activist)
  • Apostasy in Islam
  • Criticism of Islam
  • Internet censorship in Pakistan
  • List of former Muslims
  • MANIFESTO: Together facing the new totalitarianism
  • WikiIslam

References

External links