Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Cartoons have Muslims threatening newspaper

Cartoons have Muslims threatening newspaper

Death threats have forced daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten to hire security guards to protect its employees, after printing twelve cartoons featuring the prophet Mohammed. The newspaper has been accused of deliberately provoking and insulting Muslims by publishing the cartoons. The newspaper urged cartoonists to send in drawings of the prophet, after an author complained that nobody dared to illustrate his book on Mohammed. The author claimed that illustrators feared that extremist Muslims would find it sacrilegious to break the Islamic ban on depicting Mohammed. Twelve illustrators heeded the newspaper's call, and sent in cartoons of the prophet, which were published in the newspaper earlier this month.

Muslim spokesmen demanded that Jyllands-Posten retracted the cartoons and apologised. 'We have taken a few necessary measures in the situation, as some people seem to have taken offence and are sending threats of different kinds,' the newspaper's editor-in-chief, Carsten Juste, told national broadcaster DR. The same day as the newspaper published the cartoons, it received a threatening telephone call against 'one of the twelve illustrators', as the caller said. Shortly afterwards, police arrested a 17-year-old, who admitted to phoning in the threat. Since then, journalists and editors alike have received threats by email and the telephone. The newspaper told its staff to remain alert, but then decided to hire security guards to protect its Copenhagen office. 'Up until now, we have only had receptionists in the lobby. But we don't feel that they should sit down there by themselves, so we posted a guard there as well,' Juste said. Muslim organisations, like the Islamic Religious Community, have demanded an apology, but Juste rejected the idea. He said the cartoons had been a journalistic project to find out how many cartoonists refrained from drawing the prophet out of fear.

'We live in a democracy,' he said. 'That's why we can use all the journalistic methods we want to. Satire is accepted in this country, and you can make caricatures. Religion shouldn't set any barriers on that sort of expression. This doesn't mean that we wish to insult any Muslims.' Juste's opinion was not shared by Århus imam Raed Hlayhel, who gave an interview to the internet edition of Arabic satellite news channel al-Jazeera to protest the newspaper's cartoons. Hlayhel told al-Jazeera's reporter that he considered the cartoons derisive of Islam, and described one of the drawings as showing Mohammed wearing a turban-like bomb, and another as brandishing a sabre, with two burka-clad women behind him. Hlayhel said he did not understand how such illustrations could be printed with reference to freedom of expression, when Denmark did not tolerate the slightest sign of anti-Semitism. Al-Jazeera concluded that the drawings seemed bizarre.

Danish Muslims denounce newspaper

A group of 16 Muslim organisations issued a statement on Wednesday demanding that Jyllands-Posten apologise for printing the drawings. "The newspaper has with its action deliberately stepped on Islam's ethical and moral values with the purpose of contempt and ridiculing Muslims' feelings, their holy sites and their religious symbols," the group said.

4 Comments:

At October 12, 2005 9:43 PM, Blogger Ole said...

Is there any link available so we can see these cartoons?

 
At October 12, 2005 10:14 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Here:

http://www.uriasposten.net/index.php?p=2624

 
At October 13, 2005 2:38 AM, Blogger PD111 said...

The outrage of muslims in Denmark for what seems to be a fairly trivial slight, leads me to believe that far from the newspaper/artists, having strayed too far, it is the muslim community that is in dire need of having their prejudices challenged.

I'm afraid that challenges to their prejudices/faith, is going to occur with increasing frequency and with far greater intellectual force then a few cartoons. Now mohammed himself did not take too kindly to writers, and had a female poet assasinated (I'm going from memory here). So if muslims are following his example, I would suggest they take care. There are just so many Theo Van Goghs that the West is prepared to tolerate, before state action becomes inevitable.

Muslims had better start getting used to ever increasing questioning, criticisms, ridicule and even lampooning of their faith. The more they indicate their disapproval in unacceptable fashion such as death threats, it will further excite the lampooners to persist, for that is the nature of cartoonists and lampooners.

If muslims can't stand it without resorting to violence, they and their faith will be consumed in the fire of ridicule.

Freedom of expression has for far too long been compromised to satisfy muslim sensibilities. Unfortunately this kindness on our part has been taken as a sign of weakness, and this has led to ever increasing demands. Sooner or later this appeasement has to cease or the West will not be worth defending.

DP111

Fjordman:

PS: I have put a post on Dhimmi Watch, linking to this article from you. They have made it a thread.

 
At October 13, 2005 10:18 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

Thanks, DP111 ;-)

 

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