http://metromix.chicagotribune.com/news/celebrity/sns-ap-arabs-and-passion,0,6296551,print.story?coll=mmx-celebrity_heds

  http://tinyurl.com/22h3p


  Hanan Nsour, a veiled, 21-year-old Muslim in Jordan, came out of
"The Passion of the Christ" in tears and pronounced her verdict: Mel
Gibson's crucifixion epic "unmasked the Jews' lies and I hope that
everybody, everywhere, turns against the Jews."

  The Quran, though, says Jesus's crucifixion never happened.

  Such are the contradictions that are welling up as the Arab world
deals with "The Passion," even as the film draws large audiences in
Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and other Arab countries that have approved it
for screening.

  In the Arab world, openly voiced anti-Semitism -- and by extension
the warm reception for "The Passion" -- is bound up in the Arab
conflict with Israel. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, after watching
the film at his compound in the West Bank, was quoted by an aide as
likening Jesus' suffering to the Palestinians'.

  When the 1998 animated movie "Prince of Egypt" reached Cairo,
censors banned it. One reason given: Islam reveres Moses as a prophet,
and many Muslims recoil at seeing their prophets portrayed as
flesh-and-blood characters.

  Jesus is also a prophet to the Muslims, yet "The Passion" was OK'd
by Egypt's censors with no changes. They have not explained why "The
Passion" was allowed.

  Governments and Islamic clerics are also sending mixed signals.

  Kuwait bans any movies depicting any of the prophets recognized by
Islam, but one of its top Shiite clerics, Ayatollah Mohammed Baqer
al-Mehri, has urged an exception for "The Passion" because it "reveals
crimes committed by Jews against Christ." The government has not yet
made a decision on his call.

  The dean of Kuwait University's Islamic Law College, Mohammed
al-Tabtabai, has ordered Muslims to shun "The Passion" on the grounds
that Jesus is a prophet.

  In Jordan, a leader of the hard-line Islamic Action Front says
Muslims should read the Quran or pray instead of watching movies, but
he doesn't mind "The Passion" being screened in his country.

  "The Jews are the most upset with the movie because it reveals their
crimes against the prophets, the reformers and whoever contradicts
their opinions," Hamza Mansoor said.

  And in Egypt, the head of a department at Al-Azhar University that
often advises the censors on these matters also is taking a hands-off
approach.

  "My understanding is that it is about the last 12 hours in the life
of the Christ, which involve Christians and Jews. Muslims have nothing
to do with that," said Sheik Abdel Zaher Mohammed Abdel-Razeq.

  The Quran, Islam's holy book, is unequivocal in sura (chapter) 4,
verse 157: "They said 'We killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary, the
Messenger of Allah' -- but they killed him not, nor crucified him. But
so it was made to appear to them. And those who differ therein are
full of doubts with no knowledge, but only conjecture to follow, for
of a surety they killed him not."

  Muslims believe another man was crucified in Jesus's place.

  Many in the West accuse director Gibson of reviving the
Jews-killed-Christ claim that has stoked anti-Semitism through the
ages.

  "The Passion" is also being welcomed by the Middle East's Christian
communities. Some Egyptian churches and Christian bookshops were
selling pirated versions of "The Passion" for less than a dollar even
before the film opened here.

  In the United Arab Emirates, a Gulf News editorial extolled the film
for being "so close to the human condition in its depiction of
betrayal, greed, falsehood, forgiveness and love. As Pope John Paul II
has put it, `It is as it was!'"

  The Vatican denies the pope ever endorsed the movie with those
words, and kept out of the controversy. But Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir,
head of the Maronite church in Lebanon, waded right in.

  "It is not exaggerated and portrays reality as it is. It is a very
sad film and we did not feel there was any anti-Semitism there," Sfeir
told reporters after watching the film at a private screening.

  Part of the film is spoken in Aramaic, an ancient language still
spoken by a small minority in Syria.

  Salim Abraham, 37, a Christian journalist who speaks fluent Aramaic,
said: "I was so very happy to see my language, for the first time
ever, being spoken on the big screen and in such a powerful movie."

  "I think there is nothing anti-Semitic in it," Abraham added. "It
gives the facts as they are, though they may be slightly exaggerated
in some instances."


  xponent
  Betrayal, Greed, Falsehood, Forgiveness And Love Maru
  rob


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