Title: Exploring
1- Exploring
- Freedom of Expression
- in the Islamic World
- Dr. Arne H. Fjeldstad
2Understanding Europeans
- To reveal the European perspective on freedom of
expression and why they always offend the Muslim
people?
3Why Freedom of Expression?
- "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and
expression this right includes freedom to hold
opinions without interference and to seek,
receive and impart information and ideas through
any media and regardless of frontiers." - Article 19 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of
Human Rights
4Charter for a Free Press
- A free press means a free people
- Free flow of news and information both within and
across national borders - Independent news media, both print and broadcast,
must be allowed to emerge and operate freely in
all countries
5Freedom of Speech
- Freedom of speech versus blasphemy represents the
tension which exists between political freedom,
particularly freedom of speech, and certain
examples of art, literature, speech or other acts
which some consider to be sacrilegious or
blasphemous.
6Understanding Europe
- Not always freedom of expression in Europe
- A result of a long and hard battle against the
absolute power of monarchs and the church
7Understanding Europeans
- Muslims must understand that laughing at
religion is a part of the broader culture in
which they live in Europe, going back to
Voltaire. Cynicism, irony and indeed blasphemy
are part of the culture. Tariq Ramadan
8Understanding Islam
- It is against Islamic principles to represent in
imagery not only Muhammad, but all the prophets
of Islam. This is a clear prohibition. - In the Muslim world, we are not used to laughing
at religion, our own or anybody elses. . . For
that reason, these cartoons are seen, by average
Muslims and not just radicals, as a transgression
against something sacred, a provocation against
Islam. - Tariq Ramadan
9Europeans are Different
- Why do some people in Europe divine the freedom
of expression at the expense of other peoples
belief? - How different are the Europeans and the Muslim
people regarding blasphemy? - Why are many people in Europe yet to understand
Islamic values?
10Post-Christian Europe
- Europe is largely Post-Christian
- Most believing Christians feel their faith is
made fun of, and they are a minority too . . . - Europe is dominated by post-modern secularism and
deconstructionism
11Post-modern Secularism
- Europe is marked by post-modern secularism No
absolute TRUTH - Nothing is truly sacred, everything becomes
relative and privatized - So Nobody should really be offended. You have
your private truth, I have mine, they are both
equal, but they might change over time, who can
tell? - Consequence Nobody has the RIGHT to make any
judgement
12Post-modern Secularism
- Post-modern, deconstructionist folk belief makes
reality segmented and privatized. - The text is NOT the meaning it is in the receiver
13Post-modern Secularism
- . . makes religion privatized and marginalized in
society - People tend not to understand the role and
importance of faith - Relativism and pragmatism rule
14The Scandinavian Way
Pragmatism in practice . . .
15Understanding Denmark
- A small country
- Domestic affairs are really domestic
- Highly homogeneous people
- No tradition dealing with ethnic/religious
minorities - No post-colonial traumas
- no developed sensitivity to religions/ cultures
of others
16Denmark Religion
- Strong tradition being critical toward religion
- Criticizing religion criticizing old social
order - Anti-religious feelings and thoughts common,
sometimes high fashion
17The Danish Cartoons
- People had a variety of different opinions
- Rumours Illustrators are afraid to draw cartoons
for the childrens book about Muhammad - Late Summer Two newspapers put old cartoons on
the cover page, nothing happened - September 30 12 cartoons. No controversy
- Most media harmless, maybe childish provocation
18The Danish Cartoons
- No legal limits to freedom of speech and freedom
of the press - No one denies that Jyllands-Posten had the legal
right to publish the cartoons - The article Religions and religious people
should learn to accept insults/provocations as a
way of life in a democracy
19The Danish Cartoons
- The Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy
really began when Danish Muslim organizations
started a tour of the Middle East and attended
the meeting of OIC. As the controversy has grown,
some or all of the cartoons have been reprinted
in newspapers in more than fifty countries, which
led to violent protests, particularly in the
Islamic world.
20The Cartoon Riots
- Several death threats and rewards for murdering
those responsible for the cartoons have been
issued, resulting in the cartoonists going into
hiding. - 11 Islamic countries demanded action from the
Danish government, and several Arab countries
eventually closed their embassies in Denmark. - A large consumer boycott was organised in Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, and other Middle East countries.
Rumours spread via SMS and word-of-mouth.
21Cartoon Politics
- The Organization of the Islamic Conference and
the Arab League have demanded that the United
Nations impose international sanctions upon
Denmark and that the EU introduce blasphemy laws. - The foreign ministers of seventeen Islamic
countries renewed calls for the Danish government
to punish those responsible for the cartoons, and
to ensure that such cartoons would not be
published again.
22Danish Imams travelling
- A group of Danish Imams lobbied in the Middle
East with a 43 page dossier with many additional
allegations.
- It contained hate-mail pictures and letters that
the authors alleged were sent to Muslims in
Denmark. - At a 6 December 2005 summit of the OIC, with
many heads of state in attendance, the dossier
was handed around, and an official communiqué
issued.
23The Imams Dossier
BBC This image was circulated by Danish Muslims
to illustrate the atmosphere of
Islamophobia. This image was later found to be a
wire-service photo of a contestant at a French
pig-squealing contest (picture under)
24Self-Inflicted Blasphemy?
- If the images first published in Jyllands-Posten
are so inherently offensive that they cannot be
viewed in any context, why did Danish Muslims
distribute them across an Islamic world that
seldom looks at Copenhagen newspapers? - Do we have a case of "self-inflicted blasphemy
(Bernard-Henri Levy) ?
25The Cartoon Riots
- For weeks, numerous protests against the cartoons
have taken place worldwide, some of them violent.
- On February 4, 2006, the buildings containing
the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Syria were
set ablaze, although no one was hurt. In Beirut
the Danish Embassy office was set on fire,
resulting in the death of one protester inside.
26Demonstrations Indonesia
- INDONESIA The leader of the world's most
populous Muslim country, Indonesian President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, condemned the cartoons
as 'clearly insensitive.' - At least 200 Muslims protested against the
cartoons in Surabaya.
27Demonstrations and Riots
- Not really spontaneous, volunteer and huge
gatherings - Rather staged, well organized rallies
- Often to serve a much larger socio-political
purpose than just to express personal or
collective religious offense
281 mill Dkk in Reward
- I offer the reward of 10 Million Rupees (1
Million DKK, 120000US) for anyone who kills one
of the Cartoonists, says Syes Athar Bukhari, the
President of the Bar Association in Pakistan. - Bukhari is supported by the Jamaat-i-Islami
party, the second-largest part of the Pakistani
coalition government.
29Still Sentenced to Death . .
- One of the cartoons Lars Refn draws a young
immigrant named Muhammed in a public school, the
text in Persian "Jyllands-Posten's journalists
are a bunch of reactionary provocateurs."
30Why So Offensive?
- The cartoons were taken out of their cultural
context - Some of them labelled the Prophet as well as all
Muslims as suicide bombers with oppressed and
fearful women behind
31Nobody Noticed at first . . .
- The Egyptian newspaper Al Fagr printed six of the
cartoons during Ramadan in October 2005, strongly
denouncing them. - Not a single squeak of outrage was present.
The blogger Sandmonkey
Sandmonkey The Arab Islamic population was going
crazy over the outrage created by their
government's media, their governments was
benifitting from its people's distraction.
32Sandmonkeys Explanation
- The Saudi royal Family used it to distract its
people from the outrage over the Hajj stampede - The Jordanian government used it to distract its
people from their new minimum wage law demanded
by their labor unions - The Syrian Government used it to create sectarian
division in Lebanon and change the focus on the
Harriri murder - The Egyptian government is using it to distract
the people while it passes through the new
Judiciary reforms and Social Security Bill
33The Cartoon Riots
- Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen has
described the controversy as Denmark's worst
international crisis since World War II.
34Why Not Apologize?
- Danish PM Rasmussen stated he was sorry that
Muslims "felt insulted," but the Danish
government cannot be held responsible for what is
published in the independent media." - Similarly, Norwegian PM Jens Stoltenberg was
sorry "this may have hurt many Muslims," but said
the Norwegian government "cannot apologize for
what the newspapers print."
35Swedish Minister Sacked
- On March 21, 2006 Laila Freiwalds resigned as
Foreign Minister after accusations of lying to
media about her involvement in the closing of a
website publishing the cartoons, belonging to the
Sweden Democrats. - Her involvement in closing the website is seen by
many as a violation against that part of the
Swedish constitution dealing with press freedom.
36It Will Happen Again
- A recent survey in Denmark reveals that 57
believe a new Muhammad crisis will happen
within 5 years. - Only 13 think this is not likely
- Only 34 of Danish voters believe Islam and
democracy are compatible (down from more than
50) - Zapatera Research Institute for Monday Morning
Newspaper
37Worldviews in Conflict
- The Muhammad cartoons raises several important
issues and questions - The concept of blasphemy is different in the West
and in Islamic countries - The actual crime is also viewed very differently
in the two cultures. - Depicting Muhammed has long traditions within
Shia Islam.
38Religious Freedom
- Religious freedom means being free to reject
somebody else's religion and even to insult it. - Government should encourage its citizens to be
tolerant of one another, but its primary
responsibility is to protect its citizens' rights
and freedoms. - The fact that some people sometimes may feel
insulted is one cost of freedom. - Paul Marshall
39Worldviews in Conflict
- Ambassadors represent countries, not a religion
- Some countries actually maintain a strict
separation between the media and the government
and any interference is anti-constitutional
(Swedish Minister resigned) - Distinguish criticism from threats
- Distinguish who or what is being made fun of
40Self-Censorship in the West
- The Telegraph published an interview with Dr.
Patrick Sookhdeo where he criticized some Muslim
leaders and their efforts to bring Sharia to the
UK, titled 'The day is coming when British
Muslims form a state within a state' (19 February
2006.) - The article later was pulled from the Telegraph's
website for "legal reasons"
41What Did Dr. Sookhdeo Say?
- "They believe that the British Government has
capitulated to them, because it feared the
consequences if it did not. The cartoons, you
see, have not been published in this country. To
many of the Islamic clerics, that's a clear
victory. - In a decade, you will see parts of English cities
which are controlled by Muslim clerics and which
follow, not the common law, but aspects of Muslim
Sharia law. - Dr. Patrick Sookhdeo was brought up as a Muslim
in Guyana
42An Honest Explanation. . .
- The Boston Phoenix was honest in explaining why
they wouldn't publish the cartoons - out of fear of retaliation from the
international brotherhood of radical and
bloodthirsty Islamists who seek to impose their
will on those who do not believe as they do. This
is, frankly, our primary reason for not
publishing any of the images in question. Simply
stated, we are being terrorized, and as deeply as
we believe in the principles of free speech and a
free press, we could not in good conscience place
the men and women who work at the Phoenix and its
related companies in physical jeopardy.
43Resisting Intimidation
- Accusations of apostasy and blasphemy are also a
means to silence Muslim reformers wherever in the
world they may reside - "Supporters of God's Messenger" ("Al-Munasirun li
Rasul al Allah") announced April 12, 2006 it
would kill "atheists," "polytheists" and their
supporters unless they repented, and it listed
its targets, and many of their family members, by
name - If cartoonists rein in their satire, if pundits
and politicians carefully guard their language,
violent Islamists will accept their victory and
move on to demand the next part of their agenda
the silencing or death of those who reject or
criticize their program, including, especially,
Muslims. Paul Marshall
44Many Questions Remain
- Some of the added pictures are maybe even worse
and many people ask if they are home-made by
Danish Muslims? - Why no reaction when Al Fagr published these
cartoons on its front page during Ramadan? - Why so tolerant of death threats by radical
Muslim peoples/groups?
- Why are actually some of the cartoons viewed as
blasphemic not distinguish between them? - Is it acceptable that a particular punishment
according to Sharia (death sentence) should be
made valid globally and imposed on citizens of
another country and faith? (the cartoonists)
45A Greater Awareness
- The debate has given new prominence to the issue
of offensive behavior in general and blasphemy in
particular - People in the West have started debating and
thinking about respect for peoples beliefs and
values - Also Christians have become more aware of the
sacred issues of our faith
46Freedom Not to Publish
- The cartoons have spurred an important debate
within media on self-censorship, respect for
peoples faith, etc - Media in general tend to jump on the latest
hype and uncritically publish it - Religion and faith has been put on the medias
agenda - How things are presented is often as important as
the actual content
47New Debate in the West
- Some would argue that Muslims receive special
treatment particularly in Europe, and that the
Christian faith is treated much more offensively
and malicious - But the recent debate has also inspired
Christians in the West to fight deeply offensive
behavior against God and Jesus in a peaceful way,
and convince f.ex. A TV-channel not to air a
comedian burning pages from the Old Testament
48The Dilemma
- For Muslim majority countries to react
emotionally to these cartoons with boycotts is to
nurture the extremists on the other side, making
it a test of wills. On one side, the extremists
argue "See, we told you, the West is against
Islam." On the other side they say, "See, Muslims
cant be integrated into Europe, and they are
destroying our values by not accepting what we
stand for." - Tariq Ramadan
49A Way Forward?
- Muslims have to understand there is free speech
in Europe, and that is that. On the other side,
there needs to be an understanding that sensitive
issues must be addressed with wisdom and
prudence, not provocation. Just because you have
the legal right to do something doesnt mean you
have to do it. You have to understand the people
around you. Do I go around insulting people just
because Im free to do it? No. Its called civic
responsibility. - Tariq Ramadan
50A Way Forward?
- When will the Muslim majority stand up to reject
inflamatory or humiliating language and help
build platforms of understanding? - When will believing Christians all over the World
stand up and do the same? - One platform built on common human dignity and
values - One platform built on mutual respect for faith
itself, as well as of other people of faith?