Posted on 03/15/2014 11:45:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Siskel and Ebert they aint, but Islamic scholars, supremacists, jihadists and pressure groups have made their views known, often in quite colorful ways, about numerous motion pictures that you may want to catch. So grab some popcorn and some old tomatoes: its movie time down at the mosque!
Russell Crowes lavish Biblical epic Noah is about to be released in the Middle East, and Muslim scholars are enraged. It has been banned in Qatar, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates. Cairos Al-Azhar, which Barack Obama has praised as a beacon of Islamic learning, issued a statement denouncing the film as un-Islamic and calling for it to be banned. Some Muslim scholars in Egypt have even called for the destruction of any theater that dared to show the film.
The film has aroused such fury because, as Al-Azhar explained, depicting a prophet of Islam (as Noah is; his story is told and retold in the Quran, and he gives his name to the Muslim holy books 71st sura) contradicts the stature of prophets and messengers and antagonises the faithful. Mahmoud Mehanna, a member of Al-Azhars Senior Scholars, added that prophets, their voices, and even their shadows cannot be depicted, helpfully explaining that prophets are holy people.
This is, of course, why we have not seen Muslims make laudatory films about Muhammad, even for proselytizing purposes: the story of a prophet who cannot be shown, even in shadow, and whose voice cannot be heard makes for a dramatic vacancy the size of a movie directed by Peter Jackson (the perpetrator of the interminably turgid Lord of the Rings series). Those who dare transgress against these strictures and depict a prophet face the prospect of being declared a blasphemer, which could mean demonstrations, riots, death fatwas, and worse.
This is true of Russell Crowe, even though his film depicts a lesser prophet. He may have started out trying to be the next Charlton Heston, and could wind up instead being the next Salman Rushdie.
Ya Rab: Jihad Against Terrorism is a Bollywood film that, according to Business of Cinema, broadly deals with the issue of Jihad and how Quran has been misinterpreted to give birth to terrorism.
Youd think that peaceful Muslims would be glad to see this addressed certainly I myself am interested to see how Ajaz Khan makes a case that Quran has been misinterpreted to give birth to terrorism, since jihad terrorists routinely quote chapter and verse of the Quran to justify their actions, and for years Ive called upon Muslims who claim that this is a hijacking of Islam to refute their exegesis.
Instead, however, Muslims in India protested against the film, and a Muslim group, Jamiatul Ulema-e-Maharashtra, went to court in a failed effort to get it banned. This was even after they succeeded in getting the filmmakers to remove portions they found objectionable. Indian Muslim leader Syed Furqan fulminated:
Why the film has portrayed only Muslims as terrorists? It would have shown people from other religions as terrorists. The fact is that the film portrays bad and negative image of Muslims. Far from clearing the misconceptions, it will create hatred against the Muslim community.
These are common arguments that we hear in the West also: that other religions inspire terrorists as well, and to speak about jihad terror will only lead people to hate Muslims. But to depict modern-day terrorists who quoted the Bible or Bhagavad Gita or any other religious texts to justify violence, the filmmakers would have had to enter wholly into the realm of fantasy. And clearly Ajaz Khan didnt make the film because he hated Muslims, but because he wanted to create a Muslim effort against jihad terror. That instead he met with rage, protests, and demands that his film be banned is telling.
This is, of course, the amateurish YouTube video trailer depicting Muhammad doing things that early Muslim sources say he did, which Barack Obama and his aides blamed for the Benghazi jihad attack of September 11, 2012.
Subsequently, there really were worldwide Muslim riots and rage over this video, followed by Barack Obama intoning at the UN that the future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam and Hillary Clinton assuring the father of one of the Benghazi victims that the filmmaker would be imprisoned which he was, making him Americas first political prisoner and martyr for the freedom of speech.
All this culminated in the 9th Appeals Courts recent ruling that Google had to take the video down from YouTube, because an actress in it, Cindy Lee Garcia, objected to how her voice had been re-dubbed and how she had been misled as to the nature of the project. Google pointed out how ridiculous this ruling was:
The panel has adopted a novel interpretation of copyright law that will invite uncertainty and chaos for the entertainment industry, documentary filmmakers, amateur content creators, and for online hosting services like YouTube, allowing bit players in movies, videos, and other media to control how and when creative works are publicly displayed.
The court later allowed the video to be restored if Garcias five-second appearance were edited out. One thing was clear throughout the whole legal battle: if the film had been critical of any other religious figure, it never would have been ordered down, or have become the epicenter of such intense controversy. But the future indeed appears not to belong either to those who slander the prophet of Islam, or those who disclose uncomfortable truths about him.
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This hyper-sensitivity with regard to Islam goes back a long way in Hollywood. Even films about terrorism rarely depict Islamic jihadists, and when they do, there is invariably a moderate Muslim character on the other side, fighting against the jihadists with all he has.
Even as far back as 2001, when Tom Clancys novel about Islamic terrorists, The Sum of All Fears, was being made into a movie, the Hamas-linked Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) launched a successful campaign to pressure the filmmakers into changing the terrorists of the script into some other kind of villain. Despite the fact that the film was targeted for a post-9/11 audience, and that Islamic jihad terrorism is quite obviously real (and much more real in todays world than neo-Nazi terror), the filmmakers bowed to CAIRs pressure and re-cast the villains as neo-Nazis. Film director Phil Alden Robinson wrote abjectly to CAIR,
I hope you will be reassured that I have no intention of promoting negative images of Muslims or Arabs, and I wish you the best in your continuing efforts to combat discrimination.
That is how the censorship of all critical references to Islam and Muslims, even in the context of resisting jihad terror, advances in our Orwellian age: to adopt Sharia blasphemy restrictions on speaking about Islam is to combat discrimination.
But Islamic supremacists dont hate all movies. On December 22, 2008, five Muslims were convicted of plotting to enter the U.S. Army base in Fort Dix, New Jersey, and murder as many soldiers as they could. A sixth got five years in prison for weapons offenses, and the group became known as the Fort Dix Six.
This jihad plot was uncovered in January 2006 when two of the plotters entered a Circuit City outlet in New Jersey and asked a clerk to convert a videotape to DVD. The video showed men shooting automatic weapons and crying out, Allahu akbar.
Although the clerk, Brian Morgenstern, was alarmed, he hesitated over what to do. Years of politically correct indoctrination from the mainstream media made him wonder if it would be wrong to stop these men. Finally he asked a coworker, Dude, I just saw some really weird s—–. I dont know what to do. Should I call someone or is that being racist? His concern was ironic, given that the Fort Dix plotters were all white European Muslims from the former Yugoslavia. Fortunately, Morgensterns coworker urged him to contact police, and he ultimately did.
Morgensterns hesitation, however, is yet another indication of how successful American Muslim advocacy groups have been in portraying resistance to the global jihad as racism and honest discussion of the elements of Islam that jihadists use to justify acts of violence and other acts in service of Islamic supremacism as bigotryand ultimately, in confusing huge numbers of Americans about just what were up against. Nonetheless, we can be grateful that while his customers gave their beheading videos a big thumbs up, Morgenstern gave them a resounding thumbs down.
Some Muslim scholars in Egypt have even called for the destruction of any theater that dared to show the film. {re: Noah]
how very scholarly of them.
What I don’t understand is — why are these Imams who are adamant about not portraying the “prophet” Noah ( calling it blasphemous ) on film, not condemning films that portray the other prophet — Jesus?
I should like to take this opportunity to apologize to any Islamic terrorists offended by those remarks but most especially
To the Islamic terrorists in Nigeria who, having nothing better to do one night several days ago, strolled into a village housing a Christian school and slit the throats, beheaded and burned alive 15 children and nuns. I have great difficulty reconciling your murder of children especially the females given Islams blessing to marriage between old men and girls as young as 7 years of age. Depleting the supply of pre-nubile female children seems counter intuitive. Further, I understand that Algore has asked you to halt the burning alive thing as it really plays hell with your carbon footprint.
To the Islamic terrorists who murdered members of a polio vaccination team attempting to spare Muslim children from the disease.
To the Islamic terrorists who, in a recently circulated video, could be seen offering human sacrifices by shooting in the back of the head some 15 bound and kneeling non-Muslim sacrifices as the executioners shouted their heartfelt praise of Allah.
To the Islamic terrorists seen in another recent video, slitting the throat of a Christian missionary.
To the Islamic terrorists who waded into a train station to stab over thirty Chinese commuters to death.
To the Islamic terrorists who invade a small Nigerian village and shot and burned to death nearly fifty innocents, all while shouting praises to Allah. (Algore again advises you stick to the shooting thing, not burning.)
Last but not least, to any of the currently non-violent members of the religion of peace who have been cowed to silence by the violent members of Islam under threats of a grisly death to you and your entire family. While we understand your silence, it is well settled in our soon to be obsolete Western system of jurisprudence that Silence is assent.
Inasmuch as there have been approximately 22,615 acts of terror committed by members of the religion of peace since 9/11/2001, this list is NOT inclusive. I have only enough space and bandwidth to hit the highlights. If I missed any of you who felt you needed my apology, I well apologize.
I also offer my apology to the ever-vigilant FB PC/Tolerance/Diversity Police for my insensitivity.
All of that said, should Shari'a law develop deeper roots here, I would urge all Christians and Jews especially even non-observant Jews or those former Christians and Jews who claim to have become atheists to keep a bug out bag handy as you will almost certainly need it WHEN not IF WHEN the SHTF here in America.
The only “thumbs up” for these guys are where the sun don’t shine.
It should be noted that this became highly predictable when the USA used members of similar teams to track the location of bin Laden so he could be killed. Following which our Dear Leader publicly bragged about the clever methods used.
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