What Really Enrages Muslims? Twitter Knows

Posted on: 6:21 am, September 18, 2012, by Lindsay Buckingham


By Richard Allen Greene, CNN

(CNN) — What really enrages Muslims?

Having a really good hair day — but no one knows because you wear a hijab.

Not being able to say "Hi" to your friend Jack in a plane — or to call out for 
your nephew when he gets lost in an airport because his name is "Jihad."

The 72 virgins all turn out to be male.

The tongue-in-cheek answers are part of an explosion of sharply satirical 
responses on Twitter to a Newsweek magazine cover showing Muslim men in turbans 
and keffiyahs, apparently rioting, under the banner all caps headline "MUSLIM 
RAGE."

Thousands of Muslims have made fun of the magazine headline since Monday, when 
it published a long article by the Somali-born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a former 
Muslim who describes herself as a "combatant in the clash of civilizations."

She links this month's protests against an online film making fun of the Muslim 
prophet Mohammed — which have resulted in several deaths around the world, 
including that of the U.S. Ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens — to the reaction 
in 1989 against Salman Rushdie's novel "The Satanic Verses."

"In 23 years not much has changed," Ali argues. "Islam's rage reared its ugly 
head again last week.

"The American ambassador to Libya and three of his staff members were murdered 
by a raging mob in Benghazi, Libya, possibly under the cover of protests 
against a film mocking the Muslim Prophet Muhammad," Ali writes.

Newsweek's cover puts Ali herself at the heart of the story about "Muslim 
rage," with the sub-heading: "How I survived it. How we can end it."

Ali, a sharp critic of Islamist violence and of what she sees as Europe's limp 
response to it, claims that the rioters represent mainstream Muslim views.

"The Muslim men and women (and yes, there are plenty of women) who support — 
whether actively or passively — the idea that blasphemers deserve to suffer 
punishment are not a fringe group. On the contrary, they represent the 
mainstream of contemporary Islam," she argues.

The "many Muslims and ex-Muslims" who "unambiguously condemn" the murders and 
riots "are marginalized and all too often indirectly held responsible for the 
very provocation."

But by Tuesday morning, on Twitter at least, far from being marginalized, those 
Muslims were relentlessly making fun of Newsweek and Ali.

One tweet showed the magazine cover doctored to make the rioting Muslim men 
look like glam rockers, replacing the headline with "Muslim Rave."

Remi Kanzai riffed on the same theme: "Just add nighttime & glow sticks. It 
goes from #MuslimRage to #MuslimRave."

Some of the more serious tweets dealt with the discrimination Muslims feel at 
airports: "When a `female assist' is called before I even walk through the 
metal detector."

But many kept the mood light, complaining about work, family, Islamic 
restrictions on eating pork and drinking wine, or fasting during Ramadan.

"The Dark Knight Rises came out in Ramadan," one complained.

And some aimed their barbs directly at the writer of the provocative piece.

"Whaaaaat?!" Megh demanded. "Ayaan Hirsi Ali doesn't have an active Twitter 
account?!"




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