The Mohammed Cartoons
MARSHALL, PAUL
The Mohammed Cartoons Western governments have nothing to apologize for. by PAUL MARSHALL AS MOST OF THE WORLD now knows, on September 30, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published twelve...
...Germany's Die Welt did likewise, arguing that in the West there is a right to blaspheme...
...But religious freedom means being free to reject somebody else's religion and even to insult it...
...Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, head of Al-Azhar University in Cairo, proposed to raise the matter with the "U.N.'s concerned committees" and human rights groups...
...However, despite being a professed defender of human rights, she showed no alarm at the OIC's disregard for the Danes' belief in and commitment to a free press...
...Hezbollah's head, Hassan Nasrallah, declared if Muslims had carried "out the fatwa of Imam Khomeini against the renegade Salman Rushdie, the scum who are insulting our Prophet Mohammed in Denmark, Norway, and France would not dare do so...
...Gaza gunmen then threatened to kidnap French, Norwegians, Danes, and Germans unless their governments apologized...
...Religious toleration means not insulting somebody else's religion, and it is a good thing...
...Jihadi websites are threatening suicide bombings in Denmark...
...It is a very different thing to criticize the Danish or other governments, since the criticism itself, even apart from invidious calls for cartoonists to be punished by the state, assumes that government should control the media...
...They, especially the Saudis, may reply that they do not make that distinction...
...In Gaza, thousand of protesters burned Danish flags while chanting "Death to Denmark," and gunmen stormed the European Union office...
...Peter on Italian TV, Jyllands-Posten wanted to test whether "we still have freedom of speech in Denmark...
...As prime minister I have no tool whatsoever to take actions against the media, and I don't want that kind of tool...
...high commissioner for human rights, former Supreme Court of Canada justice Louise Arbour, replied to the OIC, "I find alarming any behaviors that disregard the beliefs of others...
...Meanwhile, France Soir's managing editor was sacked, as was the editor of Jordan's Shihan, which ran some of the cartoons to show how offensive they were, while urging Muslims to "be reasonable...
...The fact that people are sometimes insulted is one cost of freedom...
...France Soir published them, along with Buddhist, Jewish, and Christian caricatures, under the headline "Yes, we have a right to caricature God...
...Immediately, two employees received death threats, and the paper hired security guards...
...Similarly, Norwegian prime minister Jens Stoltenberg was sorry "this may have hurt many Muslims," but said the Norwegian government "cannot apologize for what the newspapers print...
...In Kashmir, shops closed in protest...
...Subsequently, Arab interior ministers called for Danish authorities to "punish those responsible," the Jordanian Parliament demanded action against those "striking at the sentiments of the Arabo-Muslim nation," Iran and Iraq protested to Danish envoys, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait recalled their ambassadors, Libya closed its embassy, and Saudi Arabia and Sudan announced a boycott of Danish products...
...Pakistan's Jamaat-e-Islami party placed a bounty of 50,000 Danish kroner on the cartoonists...
...Saudi Arabia, Iran, and their authoritarian brethren, as well as jihadist vigilantes, are attempting to export and impose their media censorship and version of sharia on the world at large, using economic pressure, international organizations, or violence...
...to meet Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen to complain about a "smear campaign" against Islam...
...The Jyllands-Posten affair calls us to uphold that principle internationally as well as domestically...
...With no apparent sense of irony, Egyptian officials then withdrew from a dialogue on human rights with their Danish counterparts...
...As a man of principle, Rasmussen should also tell the Egyptian and other ambassadors that not only is this none of the Danish government's business, but, since they are ambassadors of countries, not religions, it is none of their business either...
...Other media, including the BBC, are taking similar steps...
...Defending freedom of religion and freedom of the press requires distinguishing who is being criticized, and distinguishing criticism from threats...
...The U.N...
...The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Arab League want the U.N...
...It is one thing to condemn Jyllands-Posten for offending millions of people...
...Finally, amid current calls for "toleration" and "respect for belief," we need to be very clear about the distinction between religious toleration and religious freedom...
...Since not only freedom of the press but also freedom of religion are threatened, it is vital to be clear-sighted about the issues at stake...
...Government should want and encourage its citizens to be tolerant of one another, but its primary responsibility is to protect its citizens' rights and freedoms...
...Our response should be to state clearly and firmly that we do, and that protecting religious freedom requires us to uphold it in our dealings with others...
...Juste responded, "If we apologize, we go against the freedom of speech that generations before us have struggled to win...
...Subsequent disputes have drawn in the Arab League, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, the Council of Europe, the European Union, the World Trade Organization, the United Nations, and Hezbollah, to name a few...
...General Assembly to pass "a binding resolution banning contempt for religious beliefs and providing for sanctions to be imposed on contravening countries or institutions...
...In the light of Salman Rushdie's case, the butchering of Dutch director Theo Van Gogh for his film on Muslim women, and death threats against Egyptian actor Omar Sharif for playing St...
...She launched investigations into "racism" and "disrespect for belief," and asked for "an official explanation" from the Danish government...
...by PAUL MARSHALL AS MOST OF THE WORLD now knows, on September 30, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published twelve cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed...
...He responded, admirably: "I won't meet with them because it is so crystal clear what principles Danish democracy is built upon that there is no reason to do so...
...Thereafter some newspapers took their own steps...
...The paper expected a strong reaction, and got it...
...Knowing that Islamic tradition forbids such portrayals, it commissioned illustrations for what editor in chief Carsten Juste called "an article on the self-censorship which rules large parts of the Western world...
...On October 20, eleven ambassadors from Muslim-majority countries asked Paul Marshall is senior fellow at Freedom House's Center for Religious Freedom and the editor of most recently, Radical Islam's Rules: The Worldwide Spread of Extreme Shari'a Law (Rowman & Littlefield, 2005...
...In Iraq, Danish troops were put on alert after a local fatwa was issued...
...Hence, as Rasmussen correctly stated, he was sorry that Muslims "felt insulted," but the Danish government "cannot be held responsible for what is published in the independent media...
...The Norwegian Mag-azinet republished the cartoons on January 9. Then, on February 1, seven European papers including Italy's La Stampa, Spain's El Periodico, and the Netherlands' Volkskrant followed suit...
Vol. 11 • February 2006 • No. 21