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When the cartoonist's pen is mightier than the sword (even Europe’s left is finally fed up)
Sydney Morning Herald ^ | February 7, 2006 | James Button

Posted on 02/06/2006 7:21:19 AM PST by dead

Attitudes towards Muslims are hardening even in Europe's most liberal, multicultural societies, writes James Button.

WE ALL know September 11, 2001, transformed the US. But will historians say that in the long run it transformed Europe just as much, even more? It is a question worth asking as the fire lit by the publication of 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad continues to burn. Because a straight line runs from September 11 to here.

September 11 enraged Pim Fortuyn and drove him into politics. Fortuyn was the maverick Dutch politician who called Islam a "backward" religion. He might have rocketed to the prime ministership had he not been murdered (by an animal rights activist) in May 2002.

Fortuyn broke the consensual, multicultural mould of Dutch society. He inspired the filmmaker Theo van Gogh, also incensed by September 11, to make his film Submission, which overlaid verses of the Koran onto a naked female body as it explored the alleged oppression of women in Islam.

Van Gogh's 2004 murder, by an Islamic extremist, effectively completed a revolution in the Netherlands. Non-European immigration has virtually stopped; 26,000 failed asylum seekers are being expelled. Migrants are being told to speak Dutch and integrate.

The terrorism in the US is not the only cause of the upheavals in Holland, but it is central to them. A poll from June 2004, before van Gogh's murder, found that 86 per cent of people of Dutch descent felt threatened by Dutch Muslims (who are one million in a total population of 16 million).

The shockwaves have radiated far past the Netherlands. Belgian councils have banned the burqa. Italy has closed radical mosques. The German state of Baden Wurttemberg has brought in what is called the "Muslim test", in which Muslim applicants for citizenship are asked about their views on September 11, gay relationships and whether their teenage daughters are allowed to attend swimming classes.

And so to Denmark last year, when a children's author was unable to find an artist who would dare illustrate a children's book on Muhammad. Presumably they knew Muslims consider it idolatrous to make images of the Prophet. But what was most on their minds, by all reports, was the van Gogh murder.

When he heard about this, Flemming Rose, culture editor of the conservative newspaper Jyllands-Posten, was annoyed. To "see how deep this self-censorship lies in the Danish public", he asked 40 cartoonists to draw Muhammad. Twelve took up the dare, three drew Muhammad as a terrorist, and another chain reaction was set off.

September 11 matters in Europe because, while the US Muslim population is relatively small and well integrated, Europe has 15 million Muslims. They have high rates of unemployment. They are some of the continent's most marginalised people, and some of the most angry. A US study last year found that of 373 jihadists who plotted terrorist acts in Europe and North America, a quarter were western European nationals. Several newspapers which republished the cartoons justified the decision by saying they refused to be cowed by fundamentalists who wished to silence debate. The implication was that Muslims, or at least radical Muslims, are powerful.

But that is not how most European Muslims see it. They feel embattled, discriminated against, even despised. Every day more of their young people are drawn to radical Islam's conspiracy theories of a global plot against Muslims. Publishing the cartoons is likely to feed their sense of grievance and, at times, victimhood.

Naser Khader is a liberal Muslim MP in Denmark who thinks the episode has helped extremists on both sides. "The campaign against the caricatures is a clear manoeuvre on the part of Muslim radicals," he told the German newspaper Die Zeit. But he also says when an MP from the far-right Danish People's Party calls Islam a "cancer" and no one objects, it "prepares the ground" for extremism.

At a protest in London on Friday, one young person was dressed as a suicide bomber; some people carried placards calling for beheading of the cartoonists. As a response it was fanatical and out of all proportion. It also underlined Khader's point: publication has emboldened those for whom the prospect of a clash of civilisations is enticing. On its own, that is not an argument against publication. Causing offence, even rage, is an inherent and necessary risk that goes with free speech.

But the right to free speech does not exist in isolation from other values, such as empathy and respect. As a Guardian editorial says, no Western newspaper would publish anti-semitic cartoons of the kind that were published in Nazi Germany and are still published in many Arab countries.

Yes, the editors were free to run the cartoons. But what greater good was served in doing so? As Khader and others have said, a struggle for the soul of Islam is under way in Europe. Victory could mean a new form of Islam, comfortable with secularism, pluralism, dissent and women's rights. Defeat is too awful to contemplate. It is impossible to see how the cartoon wars have nudged the larger struggle in the right direction.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: mullahriotinciter
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It is impossible to see how the cartoon wars have nudged the larger struggle in the right direction.

It has further clarified the dividing battle line between western civilization and islam, for those whose vision is as weak as their intellect. By that, I mean people like European and American leftists.


1 posted on 02/06/2006 7:21:21 AM PST by dead
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To: dead

you gotta link to the stupid Danish cartoons? I haven't even seen them.


2 posted on 02/06/2006 7:23:18 AM PST by Huck (Roe/Kelo: You have a right to privacy IN your bedroom; you just don't have a right TO your bedroom.)
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To: dead

Hi!


3 posted on 02/06/2006 7:23:47 AM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: AmericanMade1776

that was suppose to be HA!but Hi anyway!


4 posted on 02/06/2006 7:24:11 AM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: AmericanMade1776

Hi! (Glad you liked it.)


5 posted on 02/06/2006 7:25:24 AM PST by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: dead

6 posted on 02/06/2006 7:25:48 AM PST by soccer_maniac (Do some good while browsing FR --> Join our Folding@Home Team# 36120: keyword: folding@home)
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To: dead

Dead on!!


7 posted on 02/06/2006 7:25:53 AM PST by ButThreeLeftsDo (Carry Daily, Apply Sparingly.)
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To: Huck
you gotta link to the stupid Danish cartoons? I haven't even seen them.

We could show you, but we'd have to kill you.

/islamist mode

8 posted on 02/06/2006 7:27:15 AM PST by SlowBoat407 (The best stuff happens just before the thread snaps.)
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To: dead
I like it much better than Indonesian Muslim cartoons...


9 posted on 02/06/2006 7:28:32 AM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: dead
But the right to free speech does not exist in isolation from other values, such as empathy and respect.

Three items - ALL of which are two-way streets.

10 posted on 02/06/2006 7:29:29 AM PST by Izzy Dunne (Hello, I'm a TAGLINE virus. Please help me spread by copying me into YOUR tag line.)
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To: dead

11 posted on 02/06/2006 7:30:39 AM PST by blueminnesota
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To: SlowBoat407


12 posted on 02/06/2006 7:33:01 AM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: AmericanMade1776

13 posted on 02/06/2006 7:33:45 AM PST by AmericanMade1776
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To: soccer_maniac

BRAVO and KUDOS for Denmark having the GUTS to post a cartoon after the bruhaha in 2004 but I dunno which of those Mullahs started the riots...yet...do you know?


14 posted on 02/06/2006 7:38:50 AM PST by Derk Bentley
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To: dead

I think the burning of France last summer might have had more to do with the sudden ferociousness of Europe than September 11 ever did, not to mention the London bombings.

September 11 was a largely Anglo-American affair. People forget that the Brits lost over 300 in the attacks, their largest single-day loss of life since WWII, and 10% of the total.

We have predicted here that the French wouldn't get serious until it was the Eiffel Tower. Well, the ROP didn't get the Tower, but they burned a lot and were threatening to move into the city center and burn it. I think that woke a lot of people who had still been asleep, dreaming multicultural dreams and singing "We Are The World."


15 posted on 02/06/2006 7:40:26 AM PST by Flavius Josephus (Enemy Idealogies: Pacifism, Liberalism, and Feminism, Islamic Supremacism)
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To: dead
Victory could mean a new form of Islam, comfortable with secularism, pluralism, dissent and women's rights.

If this were to happen, they would not be able to call it Islam any more.

16 posted on 02/06/2006 7:48:16 AM PST by Mark17
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To: dead
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
17 posted on 02/06/2006 7:52:18 AM PST by charrisGOP ("Troubles are often the tools by which God fashions us for better things." --Henry Ward Beecher)
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To: dead
But the right to free speech does not exist in isolation from other values, such as empathy and respect.


I respect other religions even if I do not follow them. Hey, the Buddists were very tolerant when the Taliban blew up their ancient statues in Afghanistan. That must have really hurt them to see the image that they respect so much being disfigured. But I didn't see Buddists rioting and killing. It made me respect the Buddists even more because they have a handle on their belief and do not take the actions of a few out on so many others.

Those of us who follow the Christian faith had good cause to be offended with a crucifix in a jar of urine or a painting of the Virgin Mary with elephant dung on her. I was plenty worked up. However, my faith tells me to turn the other cheek. I cannot respect a religion where a great many of the followers believe that killing, suicide etc. is the way to salvation. I just do not accept it.
18 posted on 02/06/2006 7:52:56 AM PST by LoudRepublicangirl (loudrepublicangirl)
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To: SlowBoat407

lol. is this the dumbest controversy ever?


19 posted on 02/06/2006 7:53:49 AM PST by Huck (Roe/Kelo: You have a right to privacy IN your bedroom; you just don't have a right TO your bedroom.)
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To: dead
Time for America to harden it's immigration policies.

Every year hundreds of thousands are granted visas to work in the United States and or obtain an education.

Many of the H1 visa holders enter US residencies as doctors.

Many of these H1 visa holders have a very anti-American view of this country.

A few foreign countries are starting to dominate these residency programs to the detriment of the medical profession.

For instance doctors from India dominate most every residency program where IMG's are allowed to practice medicine.

They do this by taking jobs as program directors jobs and then making sure that other IMG residency jobs are filled by fellow countrymen.

Sort of like the take over of the motel industry.

It's time to take a long hard look at who we let into this country.
20 posted on 02/06/2006 7:54:41 AM PST by OKIEDOC (There's nothing like hearing someone say thank you for your help.)
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