Emilie francois biography
Hollywood Actress Emilie Francois, Now a Muslim, Speaks of Social Justice in Islam
Two Hundred Verses about Compassionate Living in the Quran.
Forty Hadiths or Sayings of the Prophet Muhammad about Compassionate Living.
A British Convert to Islam: ‘I found Qur’an mother of all philosophies’
Myriam Francois-Cerrah (born Emilie François; 1983) is a Franco-British writer, broadcaster and academic on issues related to Islam, France and the Middle East. She writes a monthly column for the New Statesman online and is also a regular contributor to Middle East Eye.
Career
Francois-Cerrah currently works as a freelance journalist, in both print and broadcast media. Her articles have been featured in The Guardian, The Huffington Post,New Statesman,Your Middle East, The London Paper, Jadaliyya, ABC, The Daily Telegraph, Salon, Index on Censorship, the F-Word and the magazine Emel.
She is the presenter of a BBC documentary on the genocide at Srebrenica, which aired on BBC 1 on Monday 6 July 2015.
She is a former correspondent for the Huffington Post (2014-2015), where she broke a headline story on an exclusive 36-page document written by alleged al-Qaeda kingpin Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,.
She has worked as a programme researcher at the BBC, and currently works as a freelance programme producer on Al Jazeera’s Head to Head (2013-).
She is former assistant editor and features writer at Emel magazine (2008–2009).
She is a regular guest on BBC Big Questions (2008, 2009, 2010, 2011) and Sunday Morning Live.
She has appeared on Newsnight (2009), 4thought.tv (2011), BBC News (2010), Crosstalk(2010), BBC Radio (2012), Sky News and documentaries including Divine Women, presented by Bettany Hughes. In 2012, she commented the French presidential elections for Sky News, as well as the French presidential inauguration and 2012 local elections and regularly comments on current affairs, in particular related to France or the Middle British journalist and filmmaker (born 1982) Emilie Siobhan Geoghegan François (born December 1982), known as Myriam François and formerly as Myriam François-Cerrah, is a British journalist, filmmaker and writer. Her work has appeared on the BBC, Channel 4 and Al Jazeera. She is the founder and CEO of production company MPWR Productions, which specialises in documentary films centred on minority voices. François was born in Camden, London, to an Irish mother and a French father. She attended a French school in London and is bilingual. She was born Emilie François, but has used Myriam instead of her given name since she became Muslim in 2003. François was a child actress, whose performance as Margaret Dashwood in the Oscar-winning film Sense and Sensibility (1995) earned her critical acclaim. She went on to appear in Paws (1997), alongside Billy Connolly and Nathan Cavaleri, and in New Year's Day (2001). François holds an MA from Georgetown University (United States) and a BA from the University of Cambridge (UK). She completed her PhD (DPhil) at Oxford University, focusing on Islamic movements in Morocco in 2017. François was an assistant editor and features writer at Emel magazine (2008–2009) and worked at the Islam Channel in London. She translated Asma Lamrabet's book, Women in the Qur’an: An Emancipatory Reading which won the English Pen Award. François began her career in documentary filmmaking as a presenter and producer at the BBC. Her first documentary on BBC One, A Deadly Warning: Srebrenica Revisited (2015), was nominated for the Sandford St Martin Religious Programming Award in 2016. In 2016, she presented her second documentary, The Muslim Pound (2016), which explores the growing consumer goods market for Muslims in the UK. Collected by Zia H Shah MD, Chief Editor of the Muslim Times From Wikipedia Myriam Francois-Cerrah (born Emilie François; 1983) is a Franco-British writer, broadcaster and academic on issues related to Islam, France and the Middle East. She writes a monthly column for the New Statesman online and is also a regular contributor to Middle East Eye. Francois-Cerrah currently works as a freelance journalist, in both print and broadcast media. Her articles have been featured in The Guardian,The Huffington Post,New Statesman,Your Middle East,The London Paper, Jadaliyya,ABC,The Daily Telegraph,Salon,Index on Censorship,the F-Word and the magazineEmel. She is the presenter of a BBC documentary on the genocide at Srebrenica, which aired on BBC 1 on Monday 6 July 2015. She is a former correspondent for the Huffington Post (2014-2015), where she broke a headline story on an exclusive 36-page document written by alleged al-Qaeda kingpin Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,. She has worked as a programme researcher at the BBC, and currently works as a freelance programme producer on Al Jazeera’s Head to Head (2013-). She is former assistant editor and features writer at Emel magazine (2008–2009). She is a regular guest on BBCBig Questions (2008, 2009, 2010, 2011) and Sunday Morning Live. She has appeared on Newsnight (2009), 4thought.tv (2011),BBC News ( .Myriam François
Early life, early career and education
Career
We are all living in the Womb of God-the-Mother, 13.8 billion Years Pregnancy
Two Hundred Verses about Compassionate Living in the Quran
Beliefs, Identity and Deeds: What is a Healthy Balance?
Forty Hadiths or Sayings of the Prophet Muhammad about Compassionate Living
The Quran Applauded as a Landmark Contribution to ‘Words of Justice’ by Harvard
A British Convert to Islam: ‘I found Qur’an mother of all philosophies’
The Concept of Justice in Islam by Sir Zafrulla Khan
Career