https://sites.google.com/site/weeklyahramorgegissue1115/home-1/-a-muslim-need-not-break-or-burn

 

 

‘A Muslim need not break or burn’ 

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Angry Muslims are finding guidance from moderate preachers in the row over the 
US-made film against Islam, writes Gihan Shahine 

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Al-Tayeb; Khaled

“We must not get trapped,” warned popular Islamic preacher Amr Khaled on 
Facebook this week, his comments coming in reaction to the US-made anti-Islam 
film that has sparked massive protests around the world, leaving the US 
ambassador to Libya dead and the US flag burnt in front of the US embassy in 
Cairo. 

“This film is aimed at provoking Muslims into angry reactions that could 
portray them as backward, barbaric and even as posing a danger to the West, in 
order to justify whatever plans there are to attack Muslims,” Khaled said. 

Khaled was hosted on two talk shows on Al-Hayat and MBC satellite channels last 
Friday, where he commented on the film and provided guidance on how angry 
Muslims around the world should react in such a way as to give a positive image 
of Islam and help curb the recurrence of such offences to Islam and the Prophet 
Mohamed. 

“This [film] is an insult directed at one-fifth of the inhabitants of the 
globe,” Khaled said. “It is also an offence to humanity as a whole, since the 
message of the Prophet Mohamed (PBUP) was the source of today’s Western 
civilisation, spearheaded in Andalusia [while under Islamic rule].” 

Khaled joined forces with other moderate Islamic preachers who condemned all 
acts of violence against US embassies abroad. “This is not how the Prophet 
Mohamed himself reacted to insults by Quraishi atheists at the time of his 
preaching,” Khaled said. 

He explained that the Prophet Mohamed had been insulted by the Quraishi 
tribesmen of the Arabian peninsula, and his prudent reaction was one reason why 
those same people had eventually converted to Islam. 

“A Muslim need not break or burn because he has immense power in his hands — 
strong arguments based on truth that can easily defeat falsehood,” Khaled said. 
“Muslims should always be the ones to initiate positive actions rather than 
just react to such incidents.” 

Khaled suggested certain steps that might be taken, urging wealthy Muslim 
businessmen in Egypt and the Gulf to finance a high-quality film, perhaps 
involving the world’s most renowned actors and directors, giving a true picture 
of the life of the Prophet Mohamed. He also called on the Arab League to push 
for legislation criminalising blasphemy. 

“Legal experts and journalists should address the international community, 
demanding that it stand up in the face of insults against religion,” Khaled 
said. Young people should react positively by posting messages on Facebook and 
twitter expressing their feelings and telling the world who the Prophet Mohamed 
really was, he added. 

“This is how we can react in a civil way that can bridge the gaps with others,” 
he said, explaining that seeing the West as the enemy would be a grave mistake. 
Khaled stressed that the majority of Egypt’s Copts condemned the film, adding 
that it only represented the views of its makers. 

Khaled’s was not the only moderate Islamic voice addressing the crowds this 
week. Sheikh Youssef Al-Karadawi, president of the Union of World Muslim 
Scholars, similarly urged Muslims “to act with prudence and peace”. 

“There are individuals with bad intentions who want to portray the Prophet 
Mohamed negatively,” Al-Karadawi told worshipers during last Friday’s sermon in 
the Qatari capital Doha. “Some of them may be American citizens, but they do 
not represent the United States. Some of them are Coptic Christians. The Copts 
should know that their safety depends on their being with their Egyptian 
brothers and sisters and not with the Americans or Europeans.” 

For Al-Karadawi, discussing the life of the Prophet Mohamed with other peoples 
should be the way Muslims react to insults, and he stressed that attacks on 
embassies were unacceptable for religious reasons. 

“There should be a reaction, but without resorting to violent acts,” 
Al-Karadawi maintained. “We need to react using the same methods our enemies 
use,” he added, saying that the government of Qatar had already shot a movie 
that focussed on the life of the Prophet Mohamed. 

Al-Azhar in Cairo, the Sunni world’s most prestigious seat of learning, also 
delivered a similar message through official statements and at a conference 
held on Monday under the title “Positive Actions in Support of the Prophet 
Mohamed”. 

Al-Azhar professor Mohamed Mokhtar Al-Mahdi insisted that violence contradicted 
the teachings of the Prophet Mohamed. He said that the film could never harm 
Islam. Besides, he said, previous offences against Islam had caused non-Muslims 
to seek out further knowledge about it, eventually even converting to Islam. 

Muslim young people around the world have already responded positively to these 
calls for prudence and have posted a wave of comments on Facebook and twitter 
expressing their feelings and introducing Islam in a positive way. Some have 
uploaded material, including books and short films, in English about Islam and 
the Prophet Mohamed. 

However, Islamic scholars still insist that the UN should draft an 
international convention criminalising insults against religion in order to 
avoid the recurrence of such events. There is also a consensus among Islamic 
scholars on the urgency of increasing awareness of Islam in the West. 

The grand sheikh of Al-Azhar, Ahmed Al-Tayeb, released a statement on Saturday 
calling on UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to draft a resolution criminalising 
blasphemy against Islam and other world religions on the grounds that “such 
actions and words threaten world peace and international security.” 

Al-Tayeb also demanded that all those involved in the production of the 
blasphemous film should be “penalised for committing these heinous acts of 
abuse against the Prophet Mohamed (PBUH).” 

“Is not this irresponsible action, Mr Secretary-General, similar to the 
[anti-Semitic] prejudice you condemn all the time and [against] which verdicts 
have been issued against alleged perpetrators in many countries of the world, 
even great thinkers and intellectuals,” Al-Tayeb asked in his letter to Ban 
Ki-Moon. 

Al-Tayeb also urged crowds in Egypt and across the world to keep calm. He 
condemned the attacks on innocent people and expressed sympathy for the victims 
of the recent violence. 

“Sixty UN members representing Islamic states should walk out of the UN 
tomorrow if it does not issue international legislation against insulting Islam 
and its prophet,” said Islamic preacher Fadel Suleiman. Suleiman, who lived in 
the United States until 9/11, is the director of the Bridges Foundation, an 
international non-governmental organisation that aims to bring people of 
different religions and ethnic backgrounds together through inter-faith 
activities [www.youtube.com/bridgesfoundation]. 

“This is how true Muslims should react,” Suleiman said. 

There is something of a consensus among Islamic scholars and preachers that 
freedom of expression cannot be used as a reason for the UN not to issue such a 
resolution. They argue that Muslims should not be treated as second-class 
citizens, and that a law against anti-Semitism is already enforced against 
anyone who makes hostile comments against Jews. 

In the United States, the State Department is required to provide a 
country-by-country report on anti-Semitic acts and “harassment” together with 
the relevant government’s response. 

“The UN apparently does not have the political will to issue a law 
criminalising anti-Islamic offences,” Suleiman told Al-Ahram Weekly, 
underlining the view that many in the Islamic world are not convinced that 
insulting religion can be an exercise of freedom of expression. 

“We Muslims cherish freedom of expression, but that cannot be taken as a 
pretext to defame religion,” Khaled argued. He said that he had made this point 
during a visit to Denmark in 2006 in the aftermath of the Danish cartoons that 
ridiculed the Prophet Mohamed and sparked similar public outrage. 

“The West felt that it had made a mistake at that time, but I ask where the 
political will is to stop the recurrence of such offences,” Khaled said. The 
world cannot live in harmony and peace unless religion is respected, he added. 

“This is not about freedom of expression; this is about elections,” Suleiman 
said, commenting on US reluctance to take legal action against the filmmakers. 
While the US-based filmmakers are protected under the US constitution’s first 
amendment, Suleiman said that they could still be charged under laws that 
criminalise inciting hatred and racism. 

“The film is all about hatred, not just against the Prophet Mohamed, but 
against the message of Islam as a whole,” Suleiman said. “However, the US does 
not have the political will to take action against it, as this could be used 
against Obama and his party in the upcoming elections.” 

Many Islamist members of the Constituent Assembly tasked with writing Egypt’s 
new post-revolutionary constitution are pushing for a clause that would 
criminalise those who insult religion. This would mean that Copts living abroad 
who had been involved in the making of this anti-Islamic film could be 
prosecuted at home. 

Legalities aside, Islamic preachers and scholars agree that educating the world 
about Islam is now urgent. 

“Ignorance is the greatest enemy, and by this I mean lack of information,” 
Suleiman said, adding that the film was one of many incidents in which Islam 
and Muslims had been insulted, humiliated or portrayed as terrorists since the 
9/11 attacks on New York and Washington. 

“To stop the recurrence of such incidences, we should design a plan,” he said, 
explaining that he had already distributed 300,000 free DVDs of a three-part 
series entitled Islam in Brief, a documentary providing information on Islam in 
30 different languages [www.youtube.com/islaminbrief]. 

The material had brought about many conversions to Islam, Suleiman said, 
including in Israel. His organisation has also produced another documentary, 
entitled Jihad on Terrorism, 120,000 copies of which have been distributed 
across the world. 

He is working on a documentary entitled Islam and Women, which investigates the 
fact that 75 per cent of those converting to Islam, especially in the United 
Kingdom, are women, despite the Western view that Islam discriminates against 
women. 

“The film is in need of financial support, however,” Suleiman said. 

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