Exact(6)
Removing the religion field from ID cards is a symbolic first step towards this.
I felt angry and powerless after both incidents until the idea of covering up the religion field on my ID card came to me.
I wrote "none of your business" on a piece of paper and covered up both the religion field and the social status field (married, single) because there is also no need for the state to document that information in this way, nor for the rest of the world to know about the progress of my romantic life.
In response to questions about the campaign from The Lede on Monday, Mr. Wassef wrote: The idea was simply to invite Egyptians to mask the mention of their religion on the back of their ID (where the "religion field" is compulsory), as a statement that faith is a personal issue, and that it should stay that way.
I couldn't think of a single use for the religion field; the Egyptian state has a well documented thirst for bureaucracy and collecting information about its citizens but there is absolutely no need for it to have this information, which serves no purpose other than giving prejudiced state officials (and anyone else who sees the ID card) the opportunity to give a hard time to citizens.
The socio-demographic variables included age, gender, religion, field of practice, number of years in practice, designation and highest professional qualification.
Similar(2)
Ms Dridi, the constitutional lawyer, is unconvinced: "When the state is not involved in religion, the field is free for the Islamists".
But experienced programmers tend to value flexibility rather than religion because the field moves so quickly.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com