Media Watch
- Hundreds protest against Buddha Bar in Indonesia
- Ron Ramsey: Tennessee Republican politician under fire in 'Islam is a cult' row
- Spared jail - the car chase criminal who found religion
- Dhaka court restores 'secularism' in constitution
- Nepal's 'Buddha Boy' may be dragged to court
- Apple is now officially a religion
- Nuns sign deal with Gaga label
- Spiritual guru jailed for rape, claims he was raised in India
- Pakistan reaches out to Buddhists
- Muslim woman wearing veil 'refused bus ride' in London
Reuters AlertNet
- U.S. worried more secret documents may be released
- BP to try well kill Tuesday, House passes reforms
- VENEZUELA'S CHAVEZ SAYS HIS FOREIGN MINISTER IS READY TO MEET WI
- VENEZUELA'S CHAVEZ SAYS DEPLOYED INFANTRY, AIR FORCE FOR DEFENSI
- Turkey sued in California over Armenian genocide
- Iran: End Intimidation and Harassment of Lawyer and His Family
- U.S. House approves oil spill reform bill
- UN tells Darfur peace force to focus on security
- Obama urges Iran to release three U.S. hikers
- U.S. worried more secret documents may be released
From Fatwa to Jihad
‘[Rushdie’s critics’] campaign against Satanic Verses was not to protect the Muslim communities from unconscionable attack by anti-Muslim bigots but to protect their own privileged position within those communities from political attack by radical critics, to assert their right to be the true voice of Islam by denying legitimacy to such critics. They succeeded at least in part because secular liberals embraced them as the authentic voice of the Muslim community’ p. 165.
‘With the criminalizing of criticism of Islam has come the criminalizing of Islamic dissent. With the ban on incitement to religious hatred has come the ban on the glorification of terrorism. Far from specifically targeting Muslims, the law is taking it upon itself to determine what anyone, Muslim or non-Muslim, can say about others. Many of those who opposed the law against the glorification of terror supported the criminalizing of religious hatred as a protection for a beleaguered minority. Many of those who opposed the religious hatred law as infringing legitimate speech supported constraints on the glorification of terrorism as a necessary measure in the post-9/11 age. We cannot have it both ways. If we invite the state to define the boundaries of acceptable speech, we cannot complain if it is not just speech to which we object that gets curtailed. If the twenty years since the Rushdie affair have taught us anything, it should be that (p. 191).’
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ISBN: 184354825
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