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Mohammed Image Archive (internet current events)
Mohammed Image Archive (internet current events)

... calling for a boycott of Denmark and any other nation whose press reprints the cartoons, Europeans are trying to stand up for Western principles of freedom of speech and not cave in to self-censorship in the name of multiculturalism and fear. While the debate rages, an important point has been overl ...
Global Multiculturalism, Flexible Acculturation
Global Multiculturalism, Flexible Acculturation

... Some cases may illustrate contemporary dynamics–the Danish cartoons mocking Islam and the murder of Theo van Gogh in the Netherlands. I give brief outlines because the cases have been widely covered in international media and detailed information is readily available. The Danish cartoons originated ...
The Offensive Depictions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) in Western
The Offensive Depictions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) in Western

... The office of Charlie Hebdo was attacked again on January 7, 2015 and 12 people were shot dead including Stephane Charbonnier, the editor. The attack was widely reported and drew worldwide condemnation. However, the attack itself and the reaction to it also exposed the divisions in French society as ...
Eurabia: The Planned Islamization of Europe
Eurabia: The Planned Islamization of Europe

... of crowding out until the original population would no longer be there. A fine example in recent history is North Cyprus. Occupied since 1974 by Turkey, hundreds of thousands of Anatolian mainland Turks have been placed there. The result today is that the relationship betwen Greek and Turkish Cyprio ...
Weapons of Mass Defamation: Aspects of the 2006 `Cartoon Crisis`
Weapons of Mass Defamation: Aspects of the 2006 `Cartoon Crisis`

... Islamic mythology forms a double axis, where the vertical is the transmission of divine intent, and the horizontal the distribution of the divine message. The myth of how Allah revealed the Qur’an is, from a theological perspective, perceived as the most important, and the external assessment of wha ...
Al-Qaida`s propaganda technique and argumentation 25 November
Al-Qaida`s propaganda technique and argumentation 25 November

... Since 2006, AQ has published a total of nine videos or audio messages mentioning Denmark and the cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad. However, most of the statements have a broader agenda. The Danish Cartoon Case is only mentioned as an example of what AQ considers to be the overall western stra ...
Liquid racism and the Danish Prophet Muhammad cartoons
Liquid racism and the Danish Prophet Muhammad cartoons

... censorship, and explained how the Danish writer Kåre Bluitgen had difficulty finding an illustrator to draw Muhammad for a children’s book. The article also reported ‘that a local comedian said he didn’t dare make fun of the Koran’ (Whittam Smith, 2006). The controversy was escalated by a delegatio ...
Liquid Racism and the Danish Prophet Muhammad Cartoons
Liquid Racism and the Danish Prophet Muhammad Cartoons

Religious Reason and Secular Affect: An Incommensurable Divide?
Religious Reason and Secular Affect: An Incommensurable Divide?

... are often not only reductive of the events they purport to describe but, more importantly, also premised on normative conceptions of the subject, religion, language, and law that are far more fraught than the call for decisive political action allows. In what follows I would like to consider these i ...
Print this article - Indonesian Journal of Islam and Muslim Societies
Print this article - Indonesian Journal of Islam and Muslim Societies

... Keywords: ...
Erik Ottoson Trovalla, Iconoclasm and boundary maintenance
Erik Ottoson Trovalla, Iconoclasm and boundary maintenance

... protest against the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad which had been published in the Danish newspaper Jyllandsposten in September the previous year. The most striking effect was the boycott of dairy produce, for example Arla’s powdered milk, Dano Milk. A couple of weeks later the first serious viole ...
REVIEW ARTICLES The Danish Caricatures Seen from the Arab
REVIEW ARTICLES The Danish Caricatures Seen from the Arab

... the believers’ reactions; many sermons and articles concentrated on the prophet’s qualities, as if trying to make up for the insult of which he had been the target. In fact, well-intentioned Muslims assumed that the affront could only be the result of ignorance.2 Egyptian preacher and TV star ‘Amr K ...
CARICATURES OF MOHAMMAD: THE HISTORY AND
CARICATURES OF MOHAMMAD: THE HISTORY AND

... Denmark) protested in Copenhagen. Other more minor demonstrations took place in other towns. On 12 October the ambassadors to Denmark of ten Muslim countries wrote to prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen to demand he "reprimand those responsible". They asked to be received and were politely but firm ...
cartoon - Muhammadanism.org
cartoon - Muhammadanism.org

... will know that Islam is a tolerant and respectful belief system. They might start by allowing the scriptures of the holy prophets to be publicly sold there. These Muslim cartoons are no accident because the Qur’an itself demeans Jews, Christians, and pagans. It calls them apes (2:65), swine (5:60), ...
Political Cartoons Assignment
Political Cartoons Assignment

... Muhammad’s death had the right to rule. After Muhammad's death, some Muslims began to believe that his daughter Fatima and — more importantly — Fatima's husband, Ali, were the best sources of the Quran and Islam. Ali was Muhammad’s cousin and therefore, a blood relative. Therefore, Shia believe that ...
Death to Denmark - Research Portal
Death to Denmark - Research Portal

... countries outside the EU and requires language tests for citizenship). The general complaint was over ‘the harsh tone’ of the Danish immigrant debate. Jyllandsposten, they said, operated with a double standard, they said. Muslims were fair game, while they would never pass the ‘Jew test’. Having bee ...
Translation 2 - Text 6 plus some English stuff page
Translation 2 - Text 6 plus some English stuff page

... target of "ridicule." "We don't know why these silly people use these cartoons unless they were showing how much they hate us," Ms Varakat, a student, said. Shortly before the protest began, the foreign secretary, Jack Straw, attacked the media outlets that had republished the images. "There is free ...
Charlie Hebdo Cartoons: Respectful of Muhammad
Charlie Hebdo Cartoons: Respectful of Muhammad

... A similar situation occurred in 2006 when everyone was commenting on the infamous Danish cartoons while most of the media refused to publish them. How can one judge a cartoon without seeing it? In the so-called Muslim world, the situation is even worse. Almost all major media decided not to publish ...
Insulting Danish cartoons of the Prophet (peace be upon him
Insulting Danish cartoons of the Prophet (peace be upon him

... dialogue, in a civilized manner that respects our different faiths and cultures.” Lord Patel said, “I am absolutely disappointed and disgusted that in the name of freedom of expression, Western media, apart from UK media, are going against the feelings of the entire Muslim world. It is totally unacc ...
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, condemned the publications as a
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, condemned the publications as a

... young faculty member. The faculty met, vowed to defend “academic freedom,” but then the university removed the book from the course and the library, and the young faculty member had to return to Europe. This was only one in a chain of such “book incidents.” In May 2000, the Muslim Brotherhood’s news ...
Danish Cartoon Crisis/Controversy Peter Hervik, Aalborg University
Danish Cartoon Crisis/Controversy Peter Hervik, Aalborg University

... twelve cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad on 30 September 2005 by the Danish newspaper Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten. Also known as “The Muhammad Cartoon Crisis,” it encompasses localized reactions to stories about the publication of the cartoons, the Danish government’s response to negative rea ...
religious tolerance and islam
religious tolerance and islam

... Ariel Sharon eating the head of a Palestine baby with a city burning in the background. The prize-winning cartoonist depicts Sharon saying: “What’s wrong? Haven’t you seen a politician kissing a baby?”  As far as can be determined, no Jewish mobs rioted anywhere in the world in reaction to that high ...
Cartoon reaction is not acceptable
Cartoon reaction is not acceptable

... have served to harden the stereotype that Muslims too freely adopt violence as a way of expressing themselves. Of course this is not true of the majority of Muslims, who have acknowledged that the wave of violence that has followed the cartoons' publications does not, in any way, represent their sta ...
1

Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy

The Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy (or Muhammad cartoons crisis) (Danish: Muhammedkrisen) began after the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published 12 editorial cartoons on 30 September 2005, most of which depicted Muhammad. The newspaper announced that this was an attempt to contribute to the debate about criticism of Islam and self-censorship. Muslim groups in Denmark complained, and the issue eventually led to protests around the world, including violent demonstrations and riots in some Muslim countries.Islam has a strong tradition of aniconism, and it is considered highly blasphemous in most Islamic traditions to make a picture of Muhammad. This, compounded with a sense that the cartoons insulted Muhammad and Islam, offended many Muslims. Danish Muslim organisations that objected to the depictions responded by petitioning the embassies of Islamic countries and the Danish government to take action in response, and filed a judicial complaint against the newspaper, which was dismissed in January 2006. After the Danish government refused to meet with diplomatic representatives of the Muslim countries and would not intervene in the case, a number of Danish imams visited the Middle East in late 2005 to raise awareness of the issue. They presented a dossier containing the twelve cartoons from the Jyllands-Posten, and other information some of which was found to be falsified. As a result, the issue received prominent media attention in some Muslim countries, leading to protests across the world in late January and early February 2006. Some escalated into violence resulting in more than 200 reported deaths, attacks on Danish and other European diplomatic missions, attacks on churches and Christians, and a major international boycott. Some groups responded to the outpouring of protest by endorsing the Danish policies, launching ""Buy Danish"" campaigns and other displays of support. The cartoons were reprinted in newspapers around the world both in a sense of journalistic solidarity and as an illustration in what became a major news story.Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen described the controversy as Denmark's worst international relations incident since the Second World War. The incident came at a time of heightened political and social tensions between Muslim majority countries and Western countries, following several, high profile Islamic terrorist attacks in the West—including the September 11 attacks—and Western military interventions in Muslim countries, such as Iraq and Afghanistan. The cartoons and the reaction to them aggravated already-strained relations. The relationship between Muslims in Denmark and the broader society was similarly at a low-point, and the conflict came to symbolise the misunderstandings between the Islamic community and the rest of society. In the years since, terrorist plots claiming to be in retaliation for the cartoons have been planned, and some executed, against targets affiliated with newspapers that published the cartoons or Denmark.Supporters said that the publication of the cartoons was a legitimate exercise of free speech regardless of the validity of the expression, that it was important to openly discuss Islam without fear or that the cartoons made important points about topical issues. The Danish tradition of relatively high tolerance for freedom of speech became a focus of some attention. The controversy ignited a debate about the limits of freedom of expression in all societies, religious tolerance and the relationship of Muslim minorities with their broader societies in the West, and relations between the Islamic World in general and the West. Critics of the cartoons described them as Islamophobic, racist, or baiting and blasphemous to Muslims, possibly intended to humiliate a Danish minority. Others saw them as a manifestation of ignorance about the history of Western imperialism, double standards, and stereotyping.
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