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Danish drawings

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ak_m_f View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ak_m_f Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 February 2006 at 1:04pm
Originally posted by Ketchup Ketchup wrote:

Apparently they were published in the Arab press back in september.....


sources?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ketchup Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 February 2006 at 1:51pm

 

http://www.natashatynes.com/newswire/2006/02/egyptian_paper_ .html

The images originating in Denmark's Jyllands-Posten in September were reportedly featured on the cover and inside pages of Egypt's al-Fagr (the Dawn) in October, during the holy month of Ramadan.

http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/792

Cartoons in Egypt: Last October

From the desk of Paul Belien on Thu, 2006-02-09 10:22

While most British and American mainstream media refuse to print the cartoons "out of respect for Muslims," one of Egypt's largest papers Al Fagr printed them last October, during Ramadan.

 

http://freedomforegyptians.blogspot.com/2006/02/cartoons-wer e-published-five-months.html

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Cartoons were Published Five Months ago in Egypt

Update: See images I scanned here for the Egyptian paper, Al fager Feb 8, 2006

The whole world is mesmerized by this big campaign against Denmark. I have mentioned before that an Egyptian newspaper published the Danish Cartoons from Jyllands-Posten. Why after five months the feelings of the Egyptians and Muslims are suddenly inflamed? I am trying to get images for the reportage, but here are the details of this paper for those who can check it:

Name: Al Fager �����
Editor-in-Chief: Adel Hamouda ���� �����
Edition/issuance no. #: 21
Date: 17 October 2005, Hijri (Islamic Calendar) 14 Ramadan 1425
Reporters: Youssra Zahran and Ahmed Abdel Maksoud
���� ����� ����� ��� �������
Pages: Front & 17 for details and images
The headline in Arabic said : ������� ��������. ������� �� ������ ������� ������������
Translation: Continued Boldness. Mocking the Prophet and his wife by Caricature.

The Egyptian paper critcized the bad taste of the cartoons but it did not incite hatred protests, so what is happening now? BTW, it is not my idea to bring the details of this Egyptian paper, it is Gateway Pundit�s. I think it is important to reveal that the timing of this outrage is irrelevant. It would have been better that this holy war against Denmark be launched during the holy month of Ramadan as many Muslims believe that Jihad during Ramadan would have been more worthy.

This irrelevant outrage timing is but a sign that this violent response to the cartoons is politically-motivated by Muslim extremists in Europe and the so-called secular governments of the Middle East. I want also to mention that despite the fact that all editors who tried to reprint the cartoons in the Middle East nowadays were arrested, the Egyptian editors went unharmed. I will try to get the pages of the paper scanned.
 
 

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Egyptian Newspaper Pictures that Published Cartoons 5 months ago

No Danish Treatment for an Egyptian Newspaper

I promised you in my previous post to bring you the images of the Egyptian newspaper, Al Fager (as pronounced in Egyptian Arabic) that published the Danish Cartoons five month ago on Oct 17, 2005. Here is below the front page where the Prophet Muhammed(PBUH) cartoon from Jyllands-Posten was published.

A closer look. The text says in Arabic that a special reportage is inside. Mind you that this is the holy Muslim month of Ramadan. While Muslims are worshipping in this holy month, not a single protest was called in Cairo against Denmark or the newspaper.
Here is an image for page 17 where the whole report was published with 6 cartoons as published in Jyllands-Posten.

The two Egyptian editors, Ahmed Abel Maksound and Youssera Zaharan, from Al Fager newspaper. And from their names I could tell you that they are Muslims and there is no news on arresting them as the case in Jordan few days ago
Here is the front page with a closer look on the date , Monday October 17, 2005
Two days ago the editor in chief of Al Fager Adel Hammouda wrote an article expressing his surprise why this war is suddenly launched after 4 months. He indicates as I said in my previous post that it is politically motivated to hide more corrupt issues behind. And he is not apologizing for publishing the cartoons as the Danish newspaper did. Instead, he is proud his paper was first to publish. Denmark Cartoons absent Real Democracy Battle in Egypt

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://thekupfers.typepad.com/tothepoint/2006/02/egypt_newsp aper.html

Egypt newspaper publishes Danish cartoons

no_burka-1.gifThe BBC is not reporting on this, and they probably won't: 5 months ago, al-Fagr, an Egyptian newspaper, published the infamous Danish cartoons insulting Mohammed. It was during the religious celebration of Ramadan, amusingly enough.

Egypt has a government-controlled press. Following the publication, there was no grass-roots uprising in Egypt, no burning down embassies and no deaths. No editors received death threats or were fired. Egyptian companies were not boycotted by the Muslim world.

According to the New York Times, Muslims the world over started to get animated over the cartoons only after the leaders of 57 Muslim countries gathered in December in Mecca and discussed the cartoons. It is hardly a coincidence that Denmark's embassy in Syria was burned down on the same day that Iran was referred to the UN Security Council over their pursuit of nuclear weapons.

The sad truth is that religious fervor among Middle Eastern peoples has, once again, been manipulated by their totalitarian rulers, who dictated that what didn't offend Muslims last October, had to offend them this January.

blah blah blah

 

 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Wrangel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 February 2006 at 2:25pm

I have seen reports on Danish TV and papers that they where published by an Egypt tabloid in October.

Hi Shams Zaman, I don't know who Mr. Daniel Pipes is. Or who Mr. Rose (Cultural editor of Jyllandsposten) has as fan. Mr Rose is not the only one at Jyllandsposten responsible for publishing the drawings. He too has a boss. Mr. Rose was sent on a forced, indefinite vacation by his boss, a week or so ago.

Your theory makes no sense to me. If Jyllandsposten or Mr. Rose where doing some campaign with some evil purpose. I would expect them to work a bit harder to create this situation.

Jyllandsposten published once. The drawings has not been been published in Denmark since.

The big problems started shortly after the Muslim leaders and Imans went to Middle East with the drawings. And extra drawings. This does not mean they wished all these problems.

The problem is that the drawings where published, no Danes realized there was an insult, many Muslims where insulted. I have never heard even a hint in Denmark, that this would be a fabriced intended insult. Not a single word. Not from any media or not from anybody I have talked to.

You say:

"Today in Pakistan as well the ignorant peple fell to the plot of these conspirators and damaged the property by burning it down and two people died due to these clashes."

The way I read this in the context of your fabricated insult theory, you make it sound like violent protestors are victims to some evil conspiration. The purpose of the conspiration would be to provoce violent protests. I think violent protestors have to take full responsability for their own actions, and should be held accountable for their actions by law. This does not mean I wish them killed, or harmed in any way.

Ambassadors (8 or 11 can't recall) requested a meeting with the Danish prime minister in October last year. To protest against the drawings. He did not meet them. They received a response in the form of a letter.

The prime minister says that this was determined to be polite and diplomatically correct way to respond. My impression is that they not just would express concerns. But also would demand that the goverment take action against the newspaper. Since he knew he would not be able to, under Danish law, to interfere with the newspaper. A letter was sent instead.

For this he has been heavenly critizised in Denmark. Right after this "refused" meeting, for instance. 22 former Danish ambassadors published an open letter protestating against this. The former ambassadors did not feel the prime minister had treated the issue the Muslim ambassadors raised, with proper seriousness. They said he should have meet them instead of sending a letter.

Liberty posted:

"Yes, Muslims do not differentiate between politics and religion. In Islam their is no separation of the church and state as in western democracies. Everything that Muslims do and think both in everday life and in the running of the state is intricately linked with Islamic thought and the fear and obedience to God.

If this is the case, I do not understand how muslims and democracies can co-exist.  Please explain."


Read a book or 2 on Turkey. Thats one current example that pops to my mind.

 



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ketchup Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 February 2006 at 4:45pm

Going off on a slight tangent... some history.

http://www.zombietime.com/mohammed_image_archive/

Mohammed Image Archive
Depictions of Mohammed Throughout History


Controversy over the publication of images depicting Mohammed in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten has erupted into an international furor. While Muslims worldwide have called 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 overlooked: despite the supposed Islamic prohibition against depicting Mohammed under any circumstances, hundreds of paintings, drawings and other images of Mohammed have been created over the centuries, with nary a word of complaint from the Muslim world. The recent cartoons in Jyllands-Posten are nothing new; it's just that no other images of Mohammed have ever been so widely publicized.

This page is an archive of numerous depictions of Mohammed, to serve as a reminder that such imagery has been part of Western and Islamic culture since the Middle Ages -- and to serve as a resource for those interested in freedom of expression. (Please note that the Arabic name "Mohammed" has over the years been transliterated into Western languages with several different spellings -- some of which you'll encounter on this site -- including Mahomet, Muhammad, and Mohamed.)

The images in the Mohammed Image Archive have been divided into the following categories; click on these links to view the images in each section: 



Islamic Depictions of Mohammed in Full 


Islamic Depictions of Mohammed with Face Hidden 


European Medieval and Renaissance Images 


Miscellaneous Mohammed Images 


Book Illustrations 


Dante's Inferno 


French Book Covers 


Satirical Modern Cartoons 


The Jyllands-Posten Cartoons 


Recent Responses to the Controversy 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shamil Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 February 2006 at 9:31pm
Originally posted by Wrangel Wrangel wrote:

I don't know who Mr. Daniel Pipes is.

Daniel Pipes is to Muslims what Joseph Goebbels was to the Jews.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ketchup Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 February 2006 at 12:42am

I know this will be greeted with a MASSIVE wall of silence but hey, if it's good for the goose its good for the gander... But it would be interesting to hear why this went unvoiced, even though it is far worse than the harmless cartoons in some paper that no one reads.

Mohammed's appearance on South Park fails to spark outcry
By Chris Hastings and Beth Jones
(Filed: 05/02/2006)

An episode of South Park, the controversial American cartoon show, which featured a visual portrayal of the prophet Mohammed, has been screened on British television twice and can currently be viewed on the internet.

The episode, entitled The Super Best Friends, did not attract a single complaint from Muslim clerics when it was aired by Channel 4 in 2002 and 2003. The lack of protest is in stark contrast to the controversy over the recent newspaper publication of cartoons depicting Mohammed.

The episode casts Mohammed as a Muslim super-hero who joins forces with Jesus and Moses, both of whom are considered prophets in the Muslim faith.

Matt Stone and Trey Parker, the show's creators, gave each of the religious figures a set of special powers to take on a rival Church founded by David Blaine, the American illusionist.

In one scene Mohammed is shown rising in the air so he can do battle with the Lincoln Memorial, which has been brought to life by Blaine. The prophet, who is swatted away by the statue, cries: "Is it too powerful, Jesus?"

They decide the only way to defeat the Lincoln monster is to build a giant statue of John Wilkes Booth, the man who assassinated the real Abraham Lincoln.

Shakeel Ali, the head of the Glasgow branch of Young Muslims UK, said the lack of outrage over the South Park episode was probably due to the fact that most Muslims were not aware of it.

"Muslims see any depiction of the prophets as demeaning and this episode would cause hurt to Muslims wherever it was shown," he said.

It is not the first time that South Park has used Islamic figures for humourous purposes. In an episode screened in 2000, entitled Chef Goes Nanners, the character of the chef, voiced by Isaac Hayes, changes his name to Abdul Mohammed Jabar-Rouf Kareem Ali and adopts the Muslim faith.

The show also ran an episode entitled Osama Bin Laden Has Farty Pants in November 2001.

The Super Best Friends, which is part of the fifth series of the animated satire, is not available on DVD or video in Britain because Central Station, the channel which produces the show, has not yet presented it for certification by the British Board of Film Classification.

 



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Wrangel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 February 2006 at 8:22am

Just a couple of reflections. There has been so many posts here now, its hard to digest them all. Please add "my view" to any sentense I post. I can't speak for everybody in Denmark.

Just to return to why I am here, what I think I have learned . Or in other words what the facts are, in the view of the drawings Jyllandsposten published.

Jyllandsposten posted the drawings with the purpose of raise debate on self-censorship in media. For anyone willing to listen Jyllandsposten has said, they would never have done this if they realized the consequenes this decision would bring.

This is how close to an appology you will ever come from Jyllandsposten.

Nor the Danish goverment or the Danish people has any influence on what Jyllandsposten publish. Only Danish law, newspaper ethics and self-imbosed cencorswhip decides what is wrong or right to publish.

They published September 30. Late January all hell broke loose.

I don't care why it tok 4 months for all hell to break loose. The fact that so many Muslims has been so deeply offened is enough for me.

From this my conclusions are several.

From morale basis I see that it is wrong for a newspaper, or anybody else to insult Muslims, religious groups, other groups.  

From practical purposes, let me just say, I don't want anything even close to this, ever happening again.

Mind you, religious groups often present views that I find highly questionable. If religious groups are not not be insulted. Then must religious groups show the very same restraints. There is no reason for religious groups, not to show the same respect for other groups, that they request.

------------------------------------------------------------ --

Ketchup with his latest post raised two issues that I have been thinking about. First one is easy. I believe there is a missunderstanding by non-Muslims, that Muslims don't have humor.

The movie "Life of Brian" was banned in Norway, based on legislation to not insult religious groups. Lack of legislation to protect relgious groups in Denmark, comes from oppression from extreme christian groups. I think Norwegian law since has changed.

Until a few years ago, there was (well, its still there) a christian holiday in Denmark. Called the "Big Preyers" day. By law everything was closed. Extreme christians felt this day would have to be so very booring for everybody so everything was closed. After years, people had enough. Movie theaters where opened up anway. The law was abandoned. 

The other, this was brought on by somebody posting "filthy Danes". I have been thinking about why that remark made me angry. I have also spent some time understanding why the Danish cartoons makes Muslims angry. So far it is easier for me to understand why the Danish cartoons are insulting, then why "filthy Danes" insulting.

The "filthy Danes" I best understand. When I say I best understand, I mean I best understand my reaction. What the poster intended, I'm pretty clueless. If it was his intention to insult, or something taken out of context, part of his retorik, I don't know.

But as such, the formulation is very foriegn in my vocabularity. And viewed in the context of this thread. And specially in the context of the thread it was presented. It came is a lightening, suddenly out of the sky. And formulated in a way I am not used to. If he called all Danes idiots, I might have been upset. Now I was angry.

------------------------------------------------------------

Some additional observations.

I heard in interview on radio with a Saudi businessman. He expressed many dialoge seeking, fully understandable views. Then I was suprised to hear that he thought western laws that surpress freedom of speech on holocast, racial discrimination was hyprotical. I can only say, if we did not have these laws. If we did tolerate nazi views, the current problem would be a lot worse.

When the president of Iran publically goes out and denies holocast. Is beyond sanity. Nazis mercilessly murdered jews, gypsies, homosexuals, handicapped people and anybody who did not support their murdering. For an official representative of a country to make a statement like that. And to repeat this ... I just shake my head in sadness.

In Denmark we have had 2 attempts by right wing extremes to go demonstrating. Both has been quickly dismissed and stopped. There has been many peaceful demonstrations with participants from the entire spectra of Danish society, for peaceful dialog.

When we have laws that regulates nazi groups freedom of speech. It's because we have learned throughout decades that these groups thrive on misery, and feed of hatred. Making laws to surpress them is is not hyprocity, it is nessesity.

Edit add:

The fact that it has become clear to me that I no longer can visit all parts of the world, with the danger of being hurt, or simply being not wellcome, is a catastrophe. Muslims are wellcome to visit Denmark, I know of no restrictions enforced by any authorities, or by any groups that use violence Muslims that will prevent this. Estimated 200.000 Muslims live in Denmark. I have not heard a single complaint, that this has lead to any problems for any of these 200.000 persons. I have heard of no group in Denmark threatening them in any way.

My wife's 50 years anniversity is coming up late February. My suggestion was to goto Egypt for this. Her vote was Berlin, so of course, it was Berlin. I am happy she picked Berlin.

I would very much wellcome more Muslim participation in this thread. How can we move on? How can Danes contribute?

I realize that my posts has been a lot out myself, my views, and how this has impacted me personally. But it has severaly impacted me, emotionally, political thinking, my world has been shrinking, I have found good sane views where I thought I would find hostility, I have found hostility where I thought I would find warm wellcome. I am struggling to get through this in one piece. Just like anybody else I assume.

I also realize I must seem naive to most posters. I can assure you this is not the case. But in order to listen and to learn I must be naive. I must most of all trust that others are telling me the (or their) thruth.

Cynics might serve a purpose in everyday life, but not in crisis. Denmark is in its worst crisis now since being occupied by nazi Germany. We have to go back ~65 years, and occupation. Make no misstake about that. It may be a small crisis from your perspective, but from ours its very real.

 



Edited by Wrangel
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AhmadJoyia Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 February 2006 at 11:26am
Originally posted by liberty liberty wrote:

Yes, Muslims do not differentiate between politics and religion. In Islam their is no separation of the church and state as in western democracies. Everything that Muslims do and think both in everday life and in the running of the state is intricately linked with Islamic thought and the fear and obedience to God.

If this is the case, I do not understand how muslims and democracies can co-exist.  Please explain.

Its not correct to view Islam through the monocule of "Christianity", I suppose. Islam provides the moral ethics of politics to govern and not just any specific form of government, it could be democracy, whatever form of it a particular society chooses to live by. 

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