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Report Says Islamic Militant Cell Plotted Attack on Bologna Church

Posted on 06/23/2002 8:50:47 AM PDT by TheOtherOne

Report Says Islamic Militant Cell Plotted Attack on Bologna Church

Published: Jun 23, 2002

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ROME (AP) - Suspected Islamic militants were plotting an attack on a northern Italian church that has been the subject of protests by Muslims in the past, a newspaper reported Sunday.

The Milan daily Corriere della Sera said the San Petronio basilica in Bologna was targeted apparently because it contains a 15th century fresco that depicts Islam's prophet Muhammad in Hell, being devoured by demons.

Last year, a group of Italian Muslims appealed unsuccessfully to the Vatican to have the fresco by Giovanni da Modena removed or parts of it covered, arguing that it offended Islam.

The group, the Union of Muslims in Italy, denied any link to the plot to attack the church on Sunday and questioned the report's veracity, president Adel Smith told The Associated Press.

"We send letters and stage protests," Smith said. "It's obvious that we have nothing to do with this thing."

Corriere said Italian Carabinieri paramilitary police learned of the plot by intercepting phone conversations as part of a larger investigation into Muslim militants operating in Italy.

That investigation led to the convictions earlier this year of seven Tunisians in Milan who were accused of giving logistical support to al-Qaida recruits passing through Europe.

The Tunisians were also accused by prosecutors of links to the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, a dissident faction of the Armed Islamic Group, Algeria's most radical insurgency movement. The United States has branded the Salafist group a terrorist organization and ordered its assets frozen.

The wiretaps indicated that starting in February, members of the Milan cell began plotting an attack on the Bologna church on orders of Salafist leader Hassan Hattab, Corriere said. Specific details, however, were never discussed.

In calls placed to Carabinieri offices in Milan and Bologna Sunday, officials said no one was available to confirm the report.

Over the course of the investigation, authorities learned details of a Libyan in Italy, identified only as Amsa, who allegedly was sent by Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network to coordinate activities of the various cells operating in the country, Corriere said.

Based on information passed onto Britain from the CIA and Italian intelligence, Amsa was arrested three weeks ago in London on charges of having false documents, Corriere said. Scotland Yard said Sunday it had no information on the arrest.

AP-ES-06-23-02 1012EDT



TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hell; islam; italy; terrorism
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1 posted on 06/23/2002 8:50:48 AM PDT by TheOtherOne
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: TheOtherOne
The Church of Oscar Meyer ?????????
3 posted on 06/23/2002 8:54:39 AM PDT by cmsgop
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To: TheOtherOne
That is a Lovely Fresco....It would look so good in the bathroom
4 posted on 06/23/2002 8:56:30 AM PDT by cmsgop
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To: bologna.com
Were you aware of this?
5 posted on 06/23/2002 9:03:07 AM PDT by SpottedBeaver
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To: TheOtherOne
Wow. Has Cardinal Bifi, the Archbishop of Bolognia, made any comments about this?
7 posted on 06/23/2002 9:21:00 AM PDT by traditionalist
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To: cmsgop
.."15th century fresco that depicts Islam's prophet Muhammad in Hell, being devoured by demons."

Sounds like a bestseller to me, are prints available ? LOL!

8 posted on 06/23/2002 10:20:27 AM PDT by lawdog
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To: lawdog
I believe this is the painting they're worried about.
9 posted on 06/23/2002 10:49:25 AM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: TheOtherOne
More info:
"A Fresco Too Far: Islamic Radicals Target the Renaissance."


The Asian Wall Street Journal Friday, July 13, 2001

By Alberto Carosa

When the Afghan Taliban five months ago were busy dynamiting the gigantic third- and fifth-century statues of Buddha carved in the mountainside at Bamiyan, a few commentators asked the question: What's next? Now we know. An Islamic fundamentalist group known as Unione dei Musulmani d'Italia (Italy's Union of Muslims) is demanding that a priceless 15th-century fresco be removed from the church where it is housed, the 14th-century Cathedral of San Petronio in Bologna. Like the Taliban, these radicals are claiming the art of another religion is "obscene and blasphemous" to Islam and so must be done away with.

The fresco in question depicts the 6th century founder of Islam, Mohammed, burning in the flames of hell. It was painted by the early Renaissance master Giovanni da Modena on the wall of the Bolognini chapel as part of a wider scene based on the Last Judgement, showing hell with a monstrous Lucifer reigning over his lair, munching on sinners. To his left, a grimacing, horned demon drags the tiny Mohammed down to the Underworld. The Unione claims that this fresco is even more offensive than Salman Rushdie's "Satanic Verses," the 1988 novel that so irritated Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini that the distraught zealot passed a fatwa -- or death sentence -- on the hapless author's head.

"A new Rushdie case? Perhaps, but only six centuries late," the Italian daily il Giornale noted on June 27. According to that paper, this whole hubbub started on June 7 when Italy's Union of Muslims wrote to Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Giacomo Biffi, the archbishop of Bologna, demanding that the fresco be destroyed and the Catholic Church apologize to the Islamic community, "in much the same way as your pontiff John Paul II has already asked for pardon from the Jews and Orthodox Greeks." Having not received the requested Vatican groveling, the group is threatening mass anti-Catholic demonstrations across Italy.

In Rome, Nabil Baioni, director of the moderate Islamic Cultural Center, strikes a more judicious note, pointing out that most Muslims probably don't want to destroy art. "I've lived here 40 years and never noticed the image before now," he said. But, of course, many Muslims didn't want the millennia-old Bamiyan Buddhas destroyed either; danger foments when small, vocal fundamentalist groups realize they can get publicity and recruits for their cause by staking out the fringes.

And in Italy the radicals are already targeting their next cultural icon for destruction: the works of Dante Alighieri, Italy's national poet. In demanding that Giovanni da Modena's fresco be pulverized, the Unione blamed the perceived anti-Islamic sentiment of modern Italians on Dante, who in the Middle Ages placed Mohammed in the ninth circle of hell in the 28th Canto of his masterpiece, "The Inferno." While it is true that the fretted-over fresco was based on this 14th-century work, the would-be vandals neglect to mention that both Dante and Giovanni damned plenty of their fellow Catholics in their depictions of hell, including a smattering of priests, a pope or two, and even a canonized saint. As far as eternal perdition was concerned, these medireview artists were equal opportunity judges. Despite this fact, the Unione demands that Dante not be taught in many Italian schools.

So is this movement a threat to some of the world's finest art treasures or not? The World Muslim League, through its spokesman, pooh-poohed the campaign as "pure madness" and "more than silly." But Roberto de Mattei, president of the Rome-based think tank Centro Culturale Lepanto, offers a more dire opinion. "The demand exposes the aggressive nature of Islamic fundamentalism," he argues, "which never has renounced its goal to dominate Europe one day. What other explanation is there for attempts to destroy Italy's cultural heritage?"

The fact that the row erupted in Bologna may not be coincidental. Last September, Cardinal Biffi kicked up a religious-social tempest when he issued a pastoral letter sounding the alarm on what he called a "Muslim invasion." In a nutshell His Eminence stated that it would be nice if immigrants admitted to Italy were Catholic, to "save the nation's identity." Rejecting accusations that his suggestion violates the right of religious freedom, he said, "A country can let who it wants into its house." Anti-Islamic feelings were further fueled by the Northern League -- now part of the center-right government led by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi -- which has campaigned on an anti-immigrant platform and has called for the defense of Christian society against outside influences.

It is important to note that -- vandalism aside -- Giovanni's fresco isn't going anywhere anytime soon. The spokesman of the Archdiocese of Bologna confirmed that even if the cardinal wanted to modify or erase the fresco, he would not be allowed. In Italy, all public monuments, including the Bologna basilica and most churches, are state property; the approval of the Ministry of Culture is needed to move even a single stone. The same applies to Dante's poetry: Italian school syllabi are decided by the Ministry of Public Education -- and it's highly unlikely that the new center-right government would ever consider a request to dump the beloved master poet.

To say the least, there are lots of ingredients stewing in this boiling pot of culture. But politics aside, the issue now is art. Why target one of the most significant works of the early Italian Renaissance if the beef is supposedly with a public figure or political agenda? Cardinal Biffi -- despite his oft-expressed hankering for Italy to remain a relatively homogenous country -- frankly had no control over the coincidence that one of his episcopal predecessors commissioned a fresco from Giovanni da Modena in 1415.

There is also the niggling annoyance of historical revisionism. The medireview artist merely reproduced iconography depicting the popular medireview vision of hell. Expecting art from the 15th century to jibe with modernist notions of multiculturalism, political correctness, hyper-sensitivity, style and -- dare I say -- tedium is patently preposterous. Should we next trash the nativity because the Virgin Mary was a stay-at-home mom? Surely that scene is offensive to feminists. . . Mr. Carosa is a journalist in Rome.

(An AWSJ Culture & Thought feature for Friday-Sunday, July 13-15, 2001.)


10 posted on 06/23/2002 10:52:41 AM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: The Great Satan
Thanks for the link...I thought I had looked everywhere...apparently not.

That is some scary fresco - honestly, it's nightmarish! But I like it.
11 posted on 06/23/2002 10:54:46 AM PDT by oline
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: The Great Satan
OK, I must be blind because I didn't see any guy with a beard. Which one is supposed to be Mohammad? And BTW, how do they know it's Mohammad. I thought they didn't have any paintings of him because of the prohibition against portraying the human form. So how do they KNOW it's supposed to be Mohammad?
13 posted on 06/23/2002 11:08:00 AM PDT by McGavin999
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To: The Great Satan
I posted the image in the 2nd comment that was removed. I am not sure why, but thanks for putting the image back.
14 posted on 06/23/2002 11:08:08 AM PDT by TheOtherOne
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To: The Great Satan
Who is Muhammad in there?
15 posted on 06/23/2002 11:13:05 AM PDT by lavaroise
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To: The Great Satan
Nice to see muslims self appoint themselves to interprete it all for the world...
16 posted on 06/23/2002 11:13:41 AM PDT by lavaroise
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To: The Great Satan; MarMema; Spar; Travis McGee; knighthawk
I suppose the more recent DISGUSTING desecrations by muslims at the CHURCH of the NATIVITY in Israel, are what the the islamics call "respect" for JESUS CHRIST????

And, JESUS is the CHRIST...not a mere PROPHET!!!!

Just who the heck do these mussies think they are fooling???? They are NOT the shiniest minnows in the bucket, now are they??

17 posted on 06/23/2002 11:17:27 AM PDT by crazykatz
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To: TheOtherOne
Having not received the requested Vatican groveling, the group is threatening mass anti-Catholic demonstrations across Italy.

What happens when you practice tolerence towards the intolerent. Imagine if the Catholic Church threatend anti-Muslim demonstrations all across Italy. Or if anyone tried ot stage anti-Muslim demonstrations in any Muslim country.

18 posted on 06/23/2002 11:24:42 AM PDT by Hugin
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To: lavaroise
I'm not sure which figure is Mohammed. I'm assuming this is the fresco, based on the description in the article I posted above, which describes it as "...showing hell with a monstrous Lucifer reigning over his lair, munching on sinners. To his left, a grimacing, horned demon drags the tiny Mohammed down to the Underworld." Let's everbody play "Spot the Prophet," and see if we can't pin this down more precisely.
19 posted on 06/23/2002 11:24:47 AM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: TheOtherOne
"Muslims appealed unsuccessfully to the Vatican to have the fresco by Giovanni da Modena removed or parts of it covered, arguing that it offended Islam"

...And what, exactly, would 'Islam' be doing in a CATHOLIC CHURCH?

The stated goal of the 'offendees':

"the restoration of the Muslim glory and power, when the banner of Tawhid is raised to control the world and direct it, with no resistance."

Source

Know what? Screw them.

20 posted on 06/23/2002 11:30:44 AM PDT by cake_crumb
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