http://observers.france24.com/content/20120917-observers-explain-why--protesting-against-innocence-muslims-video-movie-film-yemen-morocco-sudan-lebanon-iraq



Our Observers explain why they're protesting against "Innocence of Muslims"

By aga mamado / Ahmed Abbas Al Bacha / Younessgera on 17/09/2012 - 10:32

Protesters in Cairo on Friday. Photo published on Twitter by @TheMiinz

 
Tensions remain high in the Muslim world over "Innocence of Muslims", a video 
recently published on YouTube. Protests denouncing the video as insulting to 
Islam, and in particular to its Prophet Muhammad, have taken place in several 
Muslim countries on Friday and over the weekend. We asked several protesters to 
tell us what shocked them most about the video.
 
While many protesters denounce this "movie", there is no proof that the video, 
presented as an excerpt, is actually part of any full-length movie. The video 
posted to YouTube, which is 13 minutes long, depicts the Prophet Mohammad, his 
wife Khadija, and his companions. The low-quality production seems to have been 
dubbed in order to make fun of these characters. (The cast of the film confirm 
that their words were dubbed.) The dialogue also denigrates the Koran and 
presents Muslims as paedophiles.
 
Protests against the video began last Wednesday in Cairo and in the eastern 
Libyan city of Benghazi. In Benghazi, the US ambassador to Libya lost his life 
during an attack on the consulate. Protests then spread like wildfire. Western 
embassies were attacked in Sudan and in Tunisia. Four protesters were killed in 
Yemen, four in Tunisia, three in Sudan and one in Tripoli, Lebanon.
 
Protests are set to continue in Lebanon – on Sunday evening, the head of 
Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, denounced the video and called on the group's 
supporters to demonstrate on Monday afternoon.
 
Protest march in Baghdad, Iraq.

"I may not know the details of these video, but I find it unacceptable that 
anyone would depict the Prophet in the first place"
Mahmoud Seddik Agha is a student who lives in Sudan's South Kordofan region. He 
took part in a protest against the video on Friday afternoon.
 
Because I live in South Kordofan, I have very limited access to Internet and to 
the media. Therefore I was unable to do my own research about this film.
 
All I saw was a short excerpt, maybe a few minutes long, that a Sudanese friend 
living in the United States sent me by email. I don't understand English very 
well, but my friend explained that it was a parody and that its goal was to 
ridicule Islam and Muslims, as well as to insult the Prophet Muhammad. And 
yesterday, at the mosque in my neighbourhood, I saw a poster inviting 
worshippers to attend a meeting where the film's content would be explained.
 
I am against the use of violence and I condemn what happened in Libya. This is 
very bad for the image of Muslims throughout the world. However, I do think it 
is necessary to go out and protest so that the world understands that this film 
insulted millions of people. I may not know the details of these insults, but I 
find it unacceptable that anyone would depict the Prophet in the first place. 
[Many Muslims believe the Koran bans all depictions of the Prophet. Cartoons of 
the Prophet caused protests throughout the Muslim world in 2006.] And in any 
case, I don't think so many people would go out in the street without a reason.
 
"I protested to ask the United States to ban the film"
Ahmed Abbas al-Bacha took part in a protest in Taiz, Yemen's second largest 
city.
 
My friends told me I shouldn't see the movie because just watching it would 
constitute a sin. Still, I wanted to understand its contents, so I watched an 
excerpt dubbed into Arabic on YouTube. I was quite shocked. In the excerpt, 
which lasted 13 minutes, our Prophet – blessed be his name – was portrayed as a 
sex addict and a paedophile. The film also claims Christians were oppressed by 
Muslims, which I believe is false.
 
So I decided to take part in a protest on Thursday, along with thousands of 
others, to denounce this awful anti-Islam production and ask the United States 
to ban it. I understand that the United States government is not responsible 
for making this movie. But perhaps lawmakers could pass a law banning 
anti-Muslim acts.
 
"I didn't watch the video - it would have disgusted me"
Younessgera lives in Casablanca, Morocco.
 
On Thursday afternoon, I joined a protest in front of the United States 
embassy, which is located near my workplace. Protesters were brandishing signs 
that read, `Everything except the Prophet'. The protest was quite peaceful – 
there were no insults or acts of violence.
 
Personally, I decided not to watch the video because it's against our religion 
to depict the Prophet. And in any case, watching Mohammad being made fun of 
would have digusted me.
 
People here know that the United States government has nothing to do with this 
awful video. But they wanted to show their anger in front of the US embassy 
because that's the country in which the film was made.
 
 
In Casablanca, protesters chanted "Obama, Obama, we are all 'Osamas'!" (in 
reference to Osama Bin Laden). 

Source URL: 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20120917-observers-explain-why--protesting-against-innocence-muslims-video-movie-film-yemen-morocco-sudan-lebanon-iraq

Links:
[1] https://twitter.com/TheMiinz/status/246607703399624704/photo/1
[2] 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20120912-exclusive-testimony-islamists-attack-us-consulate-benghazi-ambassador-libya-ansar-al-sharia-film-muslims
[3] 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20120917-observers-explain-why--protesting-against-innocence-muslims-video-movie-film-yemen-morocco-sudan-lebanon-iraq
[4] http://observers.france24.com/profile/222247
[5] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4674864.stm
[6] http://observers.france24.com/profile/163479
[7] http://observers.france24.com/profile/221965










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