The
Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy'
began after twelve editorial
cartoons, most of which depicted the Islamic prophet Muhammad,
were published in the Danish
newspaper
Jyllands-Posten on 30
September 2005. The newspaper
announced that this publication was an attempt to contribute to the
debate regarding criticism of
Islam and self-censorship.
Danish Muslim organizations, who objected to the depictions,
responded by holding public protests attempting to raise awareness
of
Jyllands-Posten's publication. Further examples of the
cartoons were soon
reprinted in newspapers in more than fifty other countries,
further deepening the
controversy in a
phenomenon commonly referred to as the
Streisand effect.
This led
to protests across the Muslim world, some of which escalated into
violence with police firing on the crowds (resulting in more than
100 deaths, all together), including setting fire to the Danish
Embassies in Syria, Lebanon and Iran, storming European buildings,
and desecrating the Danish, Dutch
, Norwegian and German flags in Gaza
City. While a number of Muslim leaders called for
protesters to remain peaceful, other Muslim leaders across the
globe, including
Mahmoud al-Zahar
of
Hamas, issued death threats. Various
groups, primarily in the
Western
world, responded by endorsing the Danish policies, including
"Buy Danish" campaigns and other displays of support.
Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen described the
controversy as Denmark
's worst
international crisis since
World War II.
Some critics of the cartoons described them as
Islamophobic or
racist,
Cartoons of Prophet Met With Outrage
Washington Post. "Kuwait called the cartoons "despicable
racism."
°
Blasphemous Cartoons Trigger Muslim Fury
Iran Daily. "Although Jyllands-Posten maintains that the
drawings were an exercise in free speech, many consider them as
provocative, racist and Islamophobic"
°
Muslim cartoon row timeline BBC online
"Egyptian newspaper al-Fagr reprints some of the cartoons,
describing them as a "continuing insult" and a "racist bomb". and
argued that they are
blasphemous to people
of the Muslim faith, are intended to humiliate a Danish minority,
or are a manifestation of ignorance about the history of Western
imperialism.
Supporters have said that the cartoons illustrated an important
issue in a period of
Islamic
terrorism and that their publication is a legitimate exercise
of the right of
free speech,
explicitly tied to the issue of self-censorship. They claim that
Muslims were not targeted in a
discriminatory way since unflattering
cartoons about other
religions (or their
leaders) are frequently printed. They question whether some of the
riots were spontaneous outpourings as they took place where no
spontaneous demonstrations are allowed, and whether the images of
Muhammad per se are offensive to Muslims, as thousands of
illustrations of Muhammad have appeared in books by and for
Muslims.
Descriptions of the drawings
Some of the cartoons can be difficult to understand fully for those
who do not know certain Danish language metaphors or are not aware
of individuals of note to the Danish public. Furthermore, certain
cartoons have captions written in Danish, and one is written in
Persian.
Timeline
Debate about self-censorship
On 17 September 2005, the Danish newspaper
Politiken ran an article under the headline
"Dyb angst for kritik af islam" ("Profound anxiety about
criticism of Islam"). The article discussed the difficulty
encountered by the writer
Kåre
Bluitgen, who was initially unable to find an
illustrator prepared to work with Bluitgen on
his children's book
Koranen og profeten Muhammeds liv
(
English:
The Qur'an and the life of the Prophet Muhammad ISBN
87-638-0049-7). Three artists declined Bluitgen's proposal before
one agreed to assist anonymously. According to Bluitgen:
One [artist declined], with reference to the murder in
Amsterdam of the film director Theo van Gogh, while another
[declined, citing the attack on] the lecturer at the Carsten Niebuhr Institute in
Copenhagen.
In October
2004, a lecturer at the Niebuhr institute at the University of
Copenhagen
had been assaulted by five assailants who opposed
his reading of the Qur'an to non-Muslims
during a lecture.
The refusal of the first three artists to participate was seen as
evidence of
self-censorship and led
to much debate in Denmark, with other examples for similar reasons
soon emerging. Comedian
Frank Hvam
declared that he would (hypothetically) dare to urinate on the
Bible on television, but not on the Qur'an.
Publication of the cartoons
On 30 September 2005, the
daily newspaper
Jyllands-Posten ("The
Jutland
Post") published an article entitled "Muhammeds ansigt" ("The face
of Muhammad"). The article consisted of twelve cartoons (of which
only some depicted Muhammad) and an explanatory text, in which
Flemming Rose,
Jyllands-Posten's culture editor, commented:
After the invitation from
Jyllands-Posten to about forty
different artists to give their interpretation of Muhammad, twelve
caricaturists chose to respond with a
drawing each. Many also commented on the surrounding
self-censorship debate. Three of these twelve cartoons were
illustrated by Jyllands-Posten's own staff, including the "bomb in
turban" and "
niqābs" cartoons.
On 19 February, Rose explained his intent further In the
Washington Post:
In October 2005, the Danish daily
Politiken polled thirty-one of the
forty-three members of the Danish cartoonist association.
Twenty-three said they would be willing to draw Muhammad. One had
doubts, one would not be willing because of fear of possible
reprisals and six cartoonists would not be willing because they
respected the Muslim ban on depicting Muhammad.
Danish Prime Minister's meeting refusal
Having received petitions from Danish imams, eleven ambassadors
from Muslim-majority countries asked for a meeting with Danish
Prime Minister
Anders Fogh
Rasmussen on 12 October 2005, in order to discuss what they
perceived as an "on-going smearing campaign in Danish public
circles and media against Islam and Muslims". In a letter, the
ambassadors mentioned not only the issue of the Muhammad cartoons,
but also a recent indictment against
Radio
Holger, and statements by MP
Louise
Frevert and the
Minister of Culture,
Brian Mikkelsen. It concluded:
The government answered the ambassadors' request for a meeting with
Rasmussen with a letter only: "The freedom of expression has a wide
scope and the
Danish government
has no means of influencing the press. However, Danish legislation
prohibits acts or expressions of blasphemous or discriminatory
nature. The offended party may bring such acts or expressions to
court, and it is for the courts to decide in individual
cases."
The ambassadors maintained that they had never asked for
Jyllands-Posten to be prosecuted; possibly, the
non-technical phrase of the letter, "to take NN to task under law",
meant something like "to hold NN responsible within the limits of
the law". Rasmussen replied: "Even a non-judicial intervention
against
Jyllands-Posten would be impossible within our
system".
The Egyptian
Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Aboul Gheit, wrote several letters to the Prime
Minister of Denmark and to the
United Nations
Secretary-General explaining that they did not want the Prime
Minister to prosecute
Jyllands-Posten; they only wanted
"an official Danish statement underlining the need for and the
obligation of respecting all religions and desisting from offending
their devotees to prevent an escalation which would have serious
and far-reaching consequences". Subsequently, the Egyptian
government played a leading role in defusing the issue in the
Middle East.
The refusal to meet the ambassadors has been criticized by the
Danish
political opposition,
twenty-two Danish ex-ambassadors, and former Minister of Foreign
Affairs,
Uffe
Ellemann-Jensen.
Judicial investigation of Jyllands-Posten
On 27 October 2005, a number of Muslim organizations filed a
complaint with the Danish police claiming that
Jyllands-Posten had committed an offence under section 140
and 266b of the
Danish Criminal
Code.
- Section 140 of the Criminal Code,
known as the blasphemy law, prohibits disturbing public order by publicly ridiculing or
insulting the dogmas of worship of any lawfully existing religious
community in Denmark. Only one case has ever resulted in a
sentence, a 1938 case involving an anti-Semitic group. The most recent case was
in 1971 when a program director of
Danmarks Radio was charged, but found
not guilty.
- Section 266b criminalises insult, threat or degradation of
natural persons, by publicly and with
malice attacking their race,
color of skin, national or ethnical
roots, faith or sexual orientation.
On 6
January 2006, the Regional Public
Prosecutor in Viborg
discontinued
the investigation as he found no basis for concluding that the
cartoons constituted a criminal
offence. His reason is based on his finding that the
article concerns a subject of
public
interest and, further, on Danish
case
law which extends editorial freedom to journalists when it
comes to a subject of public interest. He stated that, in assessing
what constitutes an offence, the right to freedom of speech must be
taken into consideration. He stated that the right to freedom of
speech must be exercised with the necessary respect for other
human rights, including the right to
protection against discrimination, insult and degradation, but no
apparent violation of the law had occurred. In a new hearing, the
Director of Public Prosecutors in Denmark agreed.
Danish Imams tour the Middle East
Two
imams who had been granted sanctuary in
Denmark, dissatisfied with the reaction of the Danish Government
and
Jyllands-Posten, created a forty-three-page document
entitled "
Dossier about championing the prophet Muhammad peace
be upon him." This consisted of several letters from Muslim
organisations explaining their case including allegations of the
mistreatment of Danish Muslims, citing the
Jyllands-Posten
cartoons (including the false claim that said publication was a
government-run newspaper) and also supplementing the following
causes of "pain and torment" for the authors:
- Pictures from another Danish newspaper, Weekendavisen, which they called "even
more offending" (than the original twelve cartoons);
- Hate-mail pictures and letters that the dossier's authors
alleged were sent to Muslims in Denmark, said to be indicative of
the rejection of Muslims by the Danish;
- A
televised interview discussing Islam with Dutch
member of parliament and Islam critic
Hirsi Ali, who had received the
Freedom Prize "for her work to further freedom of speech and the
rights of women" from the Danish
Liberal Party represented by Anders Fogh Rasmussen.
Appended to the dossier were multiple clippings from
Jyllands-Posten, multiple clippings from
Weekendavisen, some clippings from Arabic-language papers
and three additional images which also had no connection with
Denmark.

This picture of a French pig-squealing
contestant was unrelated to the Muhammed drawings, but was included
in the imams' dossier.
Original caption included in the dossier: "Her er det
rigtige billede af Muhammed", meaning "Here is the real image
of Muhammad."
The imams claimed that the three additional images were sent
anonymously by mail to Muslims who were participating in an online
debate on
Jyllands-Posten, and were apparently included to
illustrate the perceived atmosphere of Islamophobia in which they
lived. On 1 February
BBC World incorrectly
reported that one of them had been published in
Jyllands-Posten. This image was later found to be a
wire-service photo of a contestant at a French pig-squealing
contest in the Trie-sur-Baise's annual festival. One of the other
two additional images (a photo) portrayed a Muslim being mounted by
a dog while praying, and the other (a cartoon) portrayed Muhammad
as a demonic paedophile. Equipped with the dossier, the two imams
circulated it throughout the Muslim world, presenting their case to
many influential religious and
political
leaders, asking for support.
The dossier contained such statements as the following:
- We urge you [recipient of the letter or dossier] to — on the
behalf of thousands of believing Muslims — to give us the
opportunity of having a constructive contact with the press and
particularly with the relevant decision makers, not briefly, but
with a scientific methodology and a planned and long-term programme
seeking to make views approach each other and remove
misunderstandings between the two parties involved. Since we do not
wish for Muslims to be accused of being backward and narrow,
likewise we do not wish for Danes to be accused of ideological
arrogance either. When this relationship is back on its track, the
result will bring satisfaction, an underpinning of security and the
stable relations, and a flourishing Denmark for all that live
here.
- The faithful in their religion (Muslims) suffer under a number
of circumstances, first and foremost the lack of official
recognition of the Islamic faith. This has led to a lot of
problems, especially the lack of right to build mosques [...]
- Even though they [the Danes] belong to the Christian faith, the secularizations have
overcome them, and if you say that they are all infidels, then you
are not wrong.
- We [Muslims] do not need lessons in democracy, but it is
actually us, who through our deeds and speeches educate the whole
world in democracy.
- This [Europe's] dictatorial way of using democracy is
completely unacceptable.
The inclusion in the dossier of the cartoons from
Weekendavisen was possibly a misunderstanding, as these
were more likely intended as parodies of the pompousness of
Jyllands-Posten's cartoons than as comments on Muhammad in
their own right. They consist of reproductions of works such as the
Mona Lisa (caption:
For
centuries, a previously unknown society has known that this is a
painting of the Prophet, and guarded this secret. The back
page's anonymous artist is doing everything he can to reveal this
secret in his contribution. He has since then been forced
to go underground, fearing for the wrath of a crazy albino
imam). This is a parody of the
Da
Vinci Code.
At a 6 December 2005 summit of the
Organisation of the
Islamic Conference, with many
heads of
state in attendance, the dossier was handed around on the
sidelines first, and eventually an official communiqué was issued,
demanding that the
United Nations
impose
international
sanctions upon Denmark.
Jyllands-Posten response
In response to protests from Muslim groups,
Jyllands-Posten published two open letters on its website,
each of them in a
Danish and an
Arabic version. The second letter,
dated 30 January 2006, also has an
English version:
On 26 February, the cartoonist
Kurt
Westergaard who had drawn the "bomb in turban" picture, the
mostcontroversial of the twelve, explained:
Reprinting in other newspapers
In 2005, the Muhammad cartoons controversy received only minor
media attention outside of Denmark. Six of the cartoons were first
reprinted by the Egyptian newspaper
El
Fagr on 17 October 2005, along with an article strongly
denouncing them, but publication did not provoke any condemnations
or other reactions from religious or government authorities.
Between
October 2005 and the end of January 2006, examples of the cartoons
were reprinted in major European newspapers from the Netherlands
, Germany, Scandinavia,
Belgium
and France. Very soon after, as protests
grew, there were further re-publications around the globe, but
primarily in
continental
Europe.
Notable
for a lack of republication of the cartoons were most major
newspapers in Canada, the USA
and the United Kingdom, where editorials covered
the story without including them. Several
newspapers were closed and editors fired or arrested for their
decision or intention to re-publish the cartoons, including the
shutting down of a 60 year old
Malaysian
newspaper permanently. In Wales, Tom Wellingham, a student
newspaper editor at Cardiff University, was suspended after
publishing the caricature in
Gair Rhydd, the Students'
Union paper.
Economic and social consequences
A consumer
boycott was organised in Saudi Arabia
, Kuwait
(led by MP
Waleed AlـTabtabaie), and
other Middle East countries.For weeks, numerous
demonstrations and other protests against the cartoons took place
worldwide. Rumours spread via
SMS and
word-of-mouth.
On 4 February 2006, the Danish and
Norwegian
embassies in Syria
were set
ablaze, although with no injuries. In Beirut
, the Danish
Embassy was set on fire, leaving
one protester dead. The Danish embassy in Tehran
was also
torched. Altogether, at least 139 people were killed in
protests, most due to police firing on the crowds, mainly in
Nigeria, Libya, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Several
death threats and reward offers
for killing those responsible for the cartoons were made, resulting
in the cartoonists going into hiding. Four ministers have resigned
amidst the controversy, among them
Roberto Calderoli and
Laila Freivalds.
In India, Haji Yaqoob
Qureishi, a minister in the Uttar Pradesh
state government, announced in February 2006 a cash
reward of Rs 51 crore (roughly about US$11 million) for anyone who
beheads "the Danish cartoonist" who caricatured
Mohammad.Subsequently, a case was filed against Haji
Yaqoob Qureishi in the Lucknow
district court in Uttar Pradesh and demands were
made for his dismissal by eminent Muslim scholars in New Delhi
. Condoleezza
Rice,
Secretary of
State of the United States accused Iran and Syria of
organizing many of the recent
protests in Iran, Syria and Lebanon.
The Western media dubbed the series of demonstrations organized in
February 2006 by certain Middle Eastern governments and radical
clerics as the "Cartoon Intifada".
On 9 September 2006, the BBC News reported that the Muslim boycott
of Danish goods had reduced Denmark's total exports by 15.5%
between February and June. This was attributed to a decline in
Middle East exports by approximately 50%. "The cost to Danish
businesses was around 134 million euros ($170m), when compared with
the same period last year, the statistics showed." However, the
Guardian newspaper in the UK also reported, "While Danish
milk products were dumped in the Middle East, fervent rightwing
Americans started buying
Bang &
Olufsen stereos and
Lego. In the first
quarter of this year Denmark’s exports to the US soared 17%."
Further police investigations (2006 - 2007)
- The French/Algerian journalist Mohammed Sifaoui secretly filmed Ahmed Akkari, spokesman for the group of Danish
Imams that toured the Middle East, in conversation with Sheikh Raed
Hlayhel (head of the 2nd delegation), speculating that if MP
Naser Khader ever became a minister,
that two men would show up and have him and his ministry bombed.
Ahmad Abu Laban was also filmed
talking about a man who wants "to wreak absolute havoc" and "wants
to join the fray and turn it into a Martyr operation right now." Akkari initially
denied the remarks, then argued he was only joking. Both men were investigated, but no charges were
brought.
- Police in Berlin
overwhelmed
Amer Cheema, a student from
Pakistan, as he entered the office building of Die Welt newspaper, armed with a large
knife. Cheema admitted to trying to kill editor Roger Köppel
for reprinting the Mohammad cartoons in the newspaper. On 3 May
2006, Cheema committed suicide in his
prison cell. Cheema's family and
Pakistani media claim he was tortured to death. 30,000 people
attended Cheema's funeral near Lahore
.
- Two
suitcase bombs were discovered in
trains near the German cities of Dortmund
and Koblenz
, undetonated due to an assembly error. Video
footage from Cologne train station, where the bombs were put on the
trains, led to the arrest of two Lebanese students in Germany,
Youssef el-Hajdib and Jihad Hamad, and subsequently of three
suspected co-conspirators in Lebanon. On 1 September 2006,
Jörg Ziercke, head of the Bundeskriminalamt
(Federal Police), reports that the suspects saw the
Muhammad cartoons as an "assault by the West on Islam" and the
"initial spark" for the attack, originally planned to coincide with
the 2006 Football World Cup in
Germany. One of the suspects, Youssef el-Hajdib, was
arrested heading to Denmark. Police found the phone number of Abu
Bashar, the leader of the Danish Imams' first cartoon-related
delegation to the Middle East, in Hadjib's pockets. Abu Bashar
denies knowing al-Hajdib.
- A protest
demonstration in London on 3 February 2006 resulted in four
young British Muslim men being sentenced to four to six years
prison each for attempting to incite murder and terrorism.
- On 2 October 2007 during the ongoing trial of four terror
suspects arrested in Denmark, known as the Vollsmose case, one of the accused
testified that Jyllands-Posten
culture editor Flemming Rose was the
target of a terror bombing the group had planned. According to the
suspect, they were considering sending a remote-controlled car
packed with explosives into the private residence of the editor.
Threats were also allegedly made towards Danish MP Naser
Khader, who defended the publication of the cartoons.
Anniversary flare-up (September 2006)
One year after the publication of the original cartoons, a video
surfaced showing members of the
Danish People's Party's youth wing
engaged in a contest of drawing pictures that insult Muhammad.
Publicity surrounding the contest led to renewed tension between
the Islamic world and Denmark, with the OIC and many countries
weighing in. The Danish government condemned the youths, and those
who were depicted in the video went into hiding after receiving
death threats.
Two weeks into this episode, a Danish
artists' group, "Defending Denmark", claimed
responsibility for the video and said it had
infiltrated the Danish People's Party Youth for 18
months claiming "to document (their)
extreme
right wing associations".
A few days later, a new episode surfaced when a member of the
Social-liberal youth movement stated
that members of the movement had also drawn pictures of Muhammad
during a weekend meeting. Unlike the Danish People's Party Youth's
drawings, this episode was not condoned by the youth movement, but
was done by individuals.
All four videos of the controversy can be seen
here.
February 2008 death threat and resultant reprinting
On 12
February 2008, Danish police arrested three men (two Tunisians
and one Danish national originally from Morocco)
suspected of planning to assassinate Kurt Westergaard, the cartoonist who drew
the Bomb in the Turban cartoon. Shortly afterwards,
the Dane was released without charge; the two Tunisians were not
charged either, but expelled to Tunisia. Despite this, Westergaard
has since been under police protection. He has said he is angry
that a "perfectly normal everyday activity [drawing political
cartoons] which I used to do by the thousand was abused to set off
such madness."
The next day, 13 February 2008,
Jyllands-Posten, and many
other Danish newspapers including
Politiken and
Berlingske Tidende, reprinted
Westergaard's
Bomb in the Turban cartoon, as a statement
of commitment to freedom of speech. The liberal newspaper
Politiken had been critical of the original publication of
the cartoons, but reprinted this one now as a gesture of solidarity
in the face of a specific threat.
In Denmark, some public disturbances with burnt-out cars and a
school set ablaze have followed these events, but the police are
unsure if it is directly related to the cartoons controversy or the
fact that the two Tunisians were subsequently sentenced to
deportation without a trial. Other sources claim the riots in the
Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, which
started before the arrests, were wholly unrelated to the cartoons
controversy, and were rather set off by police harassment of ethnic
minorities in areas of Copenhagen. Some disturbances had occurred
already in the days preceding the arrests. Peaceful demonstrations
were held in Copenhagen after Friday prayers, with the flags of
Hizb ut-Tahrir prominent.
On 19
February 2008, "Egypt
banned
editions of four foreign newspapers including the New York-based
Wall Street Journal and Britain's The Observer for reprinting the
controversial Danish cartoons criticizing the Prophet
Muhammad". The events culminated on 2 June 2008 with an
attempt to blow up the Danish embassy in Islamabad
.
Danish troops in Afghanistan threatened
In October 2008, Ekstra Bladet published excerpts from an interview
with Taliban spokesperson Qari Yousuf Ahmadi saying Danish troops
in
Oruzgan Province are a "primary
target" of the Taliban because of the cartoon issue, adding the
Danes would be forced to leave Afghanistan.
Yale University Press self-censorship
In August, 2009, officials at
Yale
University Press decided to expunge reproductions of the
cartoon along with all other images of Muhammad from a scholarly
book entitled
The
Cartoons that Shook the World, by professor
Jytte Klausen. News of the decision sparked
criticism from some prominent Yale alumni as well as from the
American
Association of University Professors. Yale defended its
rationale by saying it feared inciting violence if the images were
published. Flemming Rose, the cultural editor who commissioned the
cartoons, has described Yale's action as "[giving] in to
indimidation... not even intimidation but an imagined
intimidation".
The images of Muhammad censored by Yale were published in the 2009
book
Muhammad: The "Banned"
Images.
Opinions and issues
Danish journalistic tradition
Freedom of speech was guaranteed
in law by the Danish Constitution in 1849, as it is today by The
Constitutional Act of Denmark, of 5 June 1953. It is defended
vigorously. It was suspended during the German
occupation of Denmark in
World War II. Freedom of expression is also
protected by the
European Convention on Human
Rights and the
International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
The
Danish newspapers
are privately owned and independent from the government, and Danish
freedom of expression is quite far-reaching, even by Western
European standards. In the past, this has provoked official
protests from Germany for Denmark allowing the printing of
neo-nazi propaganda, and from Russia for
"solidarity with terrorists" following the World Chechen Congress
held in Denmark in 1999. The organization
Reporters Without Borders ranked
Denmark at the top of its Worldwide Press Freedom Index for
2005.
Religion is often portrayed in ways that some other societies may
consider illegal blasphemy. While
Jyllands-Posten has published
satirical cartoons depicting Christian figures, it
also rejected unsolicited
surreal
cartoons in 2003 which depicted Jesus, opening them to accusations
of a
double standard. In February
2006,
Jyllands-Posten also refused to publish
Holocaust denial cartoons
offered by an Iranian newspaper. Six of the less controversial
entries were later published by
Dagbladet Information, after the
editors consulted the main rabbi in Copenhagen, and three cartoons
were in fact later reprinted in
Jyllands-Posten. After the
competition had finished,
Jyllands-Posten also reprinted
the winning and
runner-up cartoons.
Muslim tradition
Aniconism
Owing to the traditions of
aniconism in
Islam, the majority of
art concerning Muhammad
is
calligraphic in nature. The
Qur'an condemns
idolatry, and pictoral forms are seen as ostensibly
close to idol worship. These are found in A
hadith [plural of Hadith]:
"Ibn ‘Umar reported Allah’s Messenger
having said: Those who paint pictures would be punished on the Day
of Resurrection and it would be said to
them: Breathe soul into what you have
created."
Within Muslim communities, views have varied regarding pictorial
representations.
Shi'a Islam has been
generally tolerant of pictorial representations of human figures,
including Muhammad. Contemporary
Sunni
Islam generally forbids any pictorial representation of
Muhammad, but has had periods allowing depictions of Muhammad's
face covered with a veil or as a featureless void emanating light.A
few contemporary interpretations of Islam, such as some adherents
of
Wahhabism and
Salafism, are entirely
aniconistic and condemn pictorial representations
of any kind.
The Taliban, while in
power in Afghanistan
, banned television, photographs and images in
newspapers and destroyed paintings including frescoes in the vicinity of the Buddhas of
Bamyan
(which they also destroyed).
Prohibition against insulting Muhammad
In Muslim societies, insulting Muhammad is considered one of the
gravest of all crimes. Some interpretations of the
Shariah, in particular the relatively fringe
Salafi (Wahabi) group, state that any insult
to Muhammad warrants death.
However, the
Organization of the
Islamic Conference has denounced calls for the death of the
Danish cartoonists. OIC's Secretary General
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu stated
in a press release:
The Secretary General appeals to the Muslims to
stay calm and peaceful in the wake of sacrilegious depiction of
Prophet Muhammad which has deeply hurt their feelings. He
has stated that Islam being the religion of tolerance, mercy and
peace teaches them to defend their faith through democratic and
legal means.
Associating Islam with terrorism
Many Muslims have explained their anti-cartoon stance as against
insulting pictures and not so much as against pictures in
general. According to the
BBC:
Islamism and accusations of xenophobia
Fundamentalist Islam has
recently been characterized as a problem in Europe, while
disillusionment with
multiculturalism is on the rise in Denmark.
This was further fuelled by
Mullah
Krekar stating that "the number of Muslims is expanding like
mosquitoes." The
UNCHR Special Rapporteur, on the
other hand, saw
xenophobia and
racism in Europe as the root of the controversy,
particularly singling out Denmark.
Allegations of "agendas"
Agendas in the West
Some commentators see the publications of the cartoons and the
riots that took place in response, as part of a coordinated effort
to show Muslims and Islam in a bad light, thus influencing public
opinion in the West in aid of various political projects, for
example to support further military intervention in the Middle
East.
The controversy was used to highlight a supposedly irreconcilable
rift between Europeans and Islam - as the journalist Andrew Mueller
put it: "I am concerned that the ridiculous, disproportionate
reaction to some unfunny sketches in an obscure Scandinavian
newspaper may confirm that ... Islam and the West are fundamentally
irreconcilable" - and many demonstrations in the Middle-East were
encouraged by the regimes there for their own purposes. Different
groups used this tactic for different purposes, some more
explicitly than others: for example
anti-immigrant groups, nationalists,
feminists,
classical liberals
and national governments.
Muslim critics have also accused the West, in particular the EU, of
double standards in adopting laws that outlaw
Holocaust denial. Denmark, along with
Britain and Sweden, have particularly libertarian traditions
concerning Holocaust denial and pressed for wording in a recent EU
legislation that would avoid criminalizing debates about the
Holocaust and would ensure that films and plays about the Holocaust
would not be censored.
Alleged Zionist agenda
Among
others, Iran
's supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed a
"Zionist conspiracy" for the row
over the cartoons. Palestinian Christian diplomat
Afif Safieh, then the
Palestine Liberation
Organization's envoy to Washington, alleged the
Likud party concocted the distribution of Muhammad
caricatures worldwide in a bid to create a clash between the West
and the Muslim world.
Islamist or Middle East regime agendas
Other commentators see
Islamists jockeying
for influence both in Europe and the
Islamic
Ummah, who tried (unsuccessfully) to widen the split between
the USA and Europe, and simultaneously bridge the split between the
Sunnis and the
Shia.
Regimes in the Middle East have been accused of taking advantage of
the controversy, and adding to it, in order to demonstrate their
Islamic credentials, distracting from their failures by setting up
an external enemy, and "(using) the cartoons [...] as a way of
showing that the expansion of freedom and democracy in their
countries would lead inevitably to the denigration of Islam."
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced a
Holocaust Conference, supported by the
OIC, to uncover what
he called the "myth" used to justify the creation of Israel.
Ahmadinejad started voicing doubt about the veracity of the
holocaust at the same
OIC conference in
Mecca that served to spread the
Akkari-Laban dossier to leaders of the
Muslim world.
Alleged political correctness
Critics of
political
correctness see the cartoon controversy as a sign that attempts
at judicial codification of such concepts as
respect,
tolerance and
offense have backfired on their advocates,
"leaving them without a leg to stand on" and in retreat
again:
Comparable references
Numerous comparisons have been offered in public discourse
comparing earlier controversies over freedom of speech and art with
the controversy that surrounded the
Jyllands-Posten
cartoons. Some examples include:
- The Life of Jesus
(book, 2005, Greece)
- Jerry Springer - The
Opera (musical, 2005, Britain)
- Bloody Mary
(TV, 2005, United States, New Zealand, and Australia)
- Behzti (play, 2004, United
Kingdom)
- Submission (short
film, 2004, Netherlands)
- Snow White
and The Madness of Truth (installation, 2004, Sweden)
- Ecce Homo
(exhibition, 2000, Europe)
- Sensation
(exhibition, 1999, London and New York)
- Corpus Christi
(play, 1998, United States)
- Great
Lawgivers (frieze, 1997, Washington D.C.)
- Tatiana Soskin (drawing,
1997, Israel)
- Taslima Nasrin
(newspaper, 1994, Bangladesh)
- Sinéad O'Connor
(Saturday Night Live
performance, 1992, United States)
- Piss Christ (photo, 1989,
United States)
- The Satanic
Verses (novel, 1988, global)
- The Last
Temptation of Christ (novel, 1960, Europe and United
States) and The
Last Temptation of Christ (film, 1988, United States and
Europe)
- The Calcutta Quran
Petition (court case, 1985, India)
- Life of
Brian (film, 1979, United States and Europe)
- The Love
that Dares to Speak its Name (poem, 1977, United
Kingdom)
- Mohammad,
Messenger of God (film, 1977, United States, Libya, UK and
Lebanon)
And a later controversy:
See also
References
External links
Primary sources
Islamic views
Non-Islamic views
- Was nun, ferner Bärtiger? (What next, distant
bearded one?) by Sonia Mikich,
die tageszeitung, 6
February 2006 - English translation at signandsight.com
- Today’s Counter-Enlightenment by Ralf Dahrendorf, Project Syndicate
- A post-Satanic journey by Ehsan Masood, openDemocracy, 2 July 2006
- Alan Dershowitz interviewed on DR2, see Alan Dershowitz and DR2
(video - hosted on youtube.com)
- Why I drew the cartoon: The 'Muhammad Affair' in
retrospect, by Kurt
Westergaard, Daily
Princetonian, 1 October 2009
Press reviews
Video
Images
Other sources