A follow up on my article Blasphemy is in the Eye of the Beholder
On the issue of Free Speech, Cartoons and the Muslim reaction. Here are two sides of the issue from the Canadian blogosphere both defending free speech. One from the left Those Crazy Danes and one from the right The protests are getting serious yet Canadians are sitting this out
Syrian demonstrators protest outside the burning Danish embassy in Damascus February 4, 2006. Several thousand Syrian demonstrators set the Danish embassy on fire on Saturday to protest the printing by a Danish newspaper of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. REUTERS/Khaled al-Hariri
Meanwhile in the land of the free and the first Amendment everyone is making apologies for expressions of free speech.
European cartoon stance derided in US
Leonard Downie Jr, the Washington Post's executive editor, said the paper is covering the controversy over the cartoons but not reprinting them because "the very nature of depicting Muhammad editorially is not an ambiguous question. Either you do it or you don't." "It's never a concern over reactions. It's a concern over what the Washington Post decides to publish. We're maintaining our standards." Newspapers in the United States and Canada have described the cartoons and carried pictures of readers in Europe scanning them in publications there
And why would the MSM in the U.S. and Canada defend Muslim outrage over cartoons depicting Mohammed well because they are do as I say not as I do liberals. Regardless of their political stripe. Ironically what the Washington Post fails to understand is that the depiction of any aspect of G*D or his prophets is considered Idolatry in Islam. So no more pictures of the guy in heaven with his long white beard, no pictures of Abraham, Jesus or Mohammed. None. Zip. Nada. So how far is the Washington Post really willing to go to defend their position on not running the cartoons. This is a sop and a failure to address the real issue. Muslims are free to believe whatever idiotic dogma they like they are not free to impose their views in secular society. And that is the crux of the problem.
Even the U.S. government has gotten into the act. US faults Mohammed cartoons
Republicans have expressed the same outrage over art they consider deviant and have cut funding for the arts in general as an excuse. It was Vice President Dick Cheney's wife who led the purge during the infamous attack on the National Endowment for the Arts under King George I.
At that time it was the photos of Mapplethorpe and the case of a crucifix suspended into a glass of urine that was the excuse used to attack the arts and cut funding. Mapplethorpe battle changed art world
But really that wasn't an attack on Free Speech that was just good old Republicanism in action. The right wing doesn't believe in state funded art. Funny since historically that is exactly what patronage has been. Rather the Republican regime would have art relegated to what can be sold. You know paintings of cans of Campbell soup, dogs playing poker, and black velvet art from the back of truck.
But Republicans also represent the Christian Right the so called Moral Majority, and by intruding religion into politics they like the Washington Post can't have it both ways.
Like the French editor who was sacked for reprinting the cartoons, because his paper was owned by an Egyptian (somehow that little item didn't make the news), now a Jordanian editor has faced the same retribution. He did not have the protection of Free Speech that the media in North America has.
Jordanian editor loses job after plea for reason
JORDAN - A Jordanian newspaper sacked its editor and the Government warned of legal action after he published Danish caricatures of Prophet Muhammad damned by the Muslim world. Jihad al-Momani, editor of Shihan, said he reprinted the cartoons to show readers "the extent of the Danish offence", but his editorial also questioned what sparked the Muslim uproar months after the cartoons were published in September.
The head line says it all, unlike the quisling Washington Post or the U.S. government, this Jordanian editor appealed to reason. Silly man he should know that ideology and dogma trump reason.
How will the defenders of Free Speech in North America who have denounced the European Press for publishing these cartoons now defend this injustice and attack on Free Speech in the Middle East. They can't they have allowed the Muslim outcry to overcome reason, and in their blind panic to make amends have thrown the baby out with the bath water.
In fact had they not been in such a hurry to rush to judgment, then perhaps they would have noted that even in Islam the orchestrated hate campaign against the press was denounced by Muslim Clerics including the Grand Ayatollah of Iraq. Funny that. The Grand Ayatollah being more critical than either the U.S. state department or the Washington Post.
Iraq's Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani denounced the publication of the cartoons but warned that "misguided and oppressive" segments of the Muslim community were projecting "a distorted and dark image of the faith of justice, love and brotherhood "The influential religious leader said: "Enemies have exploited this... to spread their poison and revive their old hatreds with new methods and mechanisms."
Other Muslim voices have spoken out for reason as well. And not merely for false apologies based on fear of the threats.
"Muslims might have miscalculated the manner in which they handled the crisis," noted prominent Islamic scholar Abdel-Sabour Shahine, who suggested that instead of pursuing a boycott of Danish products, the Islamic world should have shown more tolerance, by focusing on promoting dialogue with the west, and educating them more about Islam. "The Qur'an ordains Muslims to engage in peaceful dialogue and use a more logical approach with those of different creeds." The prophet himself, Shahine argued, was constantly subject to offence during the first years of his prophecy in Mecca, and his reactions were so tolerant that those who initially opposed him ended up becoming Muslim."After all," said Shahine, "we'd rather have the Danes apologising out of conviction, rather than because they feel threatened."
And in case we forget all this sturm and drang is NOT about the cartoons. It was originally about Free Speech. The cartoons were the result of the fact that artists and authors in Denmark and Europe were afraid of publishing anything for fear of retaliation by fascist Islamicists.
Child's tale led to clash of cultures
· Diplomatic brush-off provoked Arab storm
· Imams toured Middle East with offending cartoons
Luke Harding in Berlin
Saturday February 4, 2006
The Guardian
It began innocuously enough. Last year the Danish writer Kare Bluitgen had been searching for someone who could illustrate his children's book about the life of the prophet Muhammad. It soon became clear, however, that nobody wanted the job, through fear of antagonising Muslim feelings about images of Muhammad.
One artist turned down the commission on the grounds that he didn't want to suffer the same grisly fate as Theo van Gogh, the Dutch film-maker stabbed to death by an Islamist fanatic. Two others also declined. "They were worried," Mr Bluitgen said, adding: "Eventually someone agreed to do it anonymously."
But along the way that issue became sidelined by the right wing. Danes march for and against Muslims The cartoons published in the right wing Danish press were part of an Anti -Muslim Anti -Islamic campaign in that country, which began last fall with comments from the Queen.
In Canada protests were neither loud nor beligerant nor violent. They defended freedom of speech. A good example that pluralism and liberalism is alive and well in Canada. They were polite, we Canadians are so damn polite, and well orchestrated.
So well orchestrated that Muslim Women and Men were seperated from each other in order to protest. Such are the Sharia laws not unlike those that oppress and discriminate against women in other religions such as fundamentalist Juadism and Christianity.
And this is a point as well, since we are making this about religion and respect, what of the respect for the human rights of individuals and in this case women which are absent from the religious dogmas of Monothiesm .
Muslims rally in Halifax over Muhammad caricatures
Last Updated Sat, 04 Feb 2006