الجمعة 05 ذو 
القعدة 1433هـ - 21 
سبتمبر 2012م
New York court okays anti-Muslim subway ad campaign
A provocative ad that equates Muslim radicals with savages is set to go up in 
the New York's subway system. (Reuters)   

The Associated Press, New York

A provocative ad that equates Muslim radicals with savages is set to go up in 
the city's subway system as violent protests over an anti-Islamic film 
ridiculing the Prophet Mohammed sweep over much of the Muslim world. A 
conservative blogger who once headed a campaign against an Islamic center near 
the Sept. 11 terror attack site won a court order to post the ad in 10 subway 
stations next Monday. The ad reads, "In any war between the civilized man and 
the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel. Defeat Jihad."

The ad was plastered on San Francisco city buses in recent weeks, prompting 
some artists to deface the ads and remove some of the words, including "Jihad," 
or holy war. The blogger, Pamela Geller, said she filed suit Thursday in the 
nation's capital to post the ad in Washington's transit system after officials 
declined to put up the ad in light of the uproar in the Middle East over the 
anti-Islam film.

Abdul Yasar, a New York subway rider who considers himself an observant Muslim, 
said Geller's ad was insensitive in an unsettling climate for Muslims.

"If you don't want to see what happened in Libya and Egypt after the video — 
maybe not so strong here in America — you shouldn't put this up," Yasar said. 
But "if this is a free country, they have the right to do this," he said. "And 
then Muslims have the right to put up their own ad.'

Geller, executive director of the American Freedom Defense Initiative and 
publisher of a blog called Atlas Shrugs, called an order by a federal judge in 
New York allowing the ads "a victory for the First Amendment" and said she 
wasn't concerned that her ad could spark protests like the ones against the 
depiction of Muslims in the video "Innocence of Muslims."

Violence linked to the movie has left at least 30 people in seven countries 
dead, including the American ambassador to Libya.

"If it's not a film it's a cartoon, if it's not a cartoon it's a teddy bear," 
she said. "What are you going to do? Are you going to reward Islamic extremism? 
I will not sacrifice my freedom so as not to offend savages."

New York police aren't anticipating adding any security to subways when the ads 
go up and have received no threats or reports of violence relating to them, 
chief spokesman Paul Browne said.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority in New York initially refused to run 
Geller's ad, saying it was "demeaning." But U.S. District Court Judge Paul 
Engelmayer ruled last month that it is protected speech under the First 
Amendment.

"Our hands are tied," MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan said. "Under our existing ad 
standards as modified by the injunction, the MTA is required to run the ad."

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, 
backed publication of the "patently offensive" ads.

"More offensive would be their censorship because that would violate the 
guarantee of free expression of all ideas regardless of how distasteful they 
are," she said.

Geller said the subway ads cost about $6,000. Donovan said they will be up for 
a month.

Opponents say the ads imply that Muslims are savages.

"We recognize the freedom of speech issues and her right to be a bigot and a 
racist," said Muneer Awad, the executive director of the New York chapter of 
the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

But he said he hopes elected officials and the MTA, which runs the nation's 
largest mass transit system, "take on a leadership role in denouncing hate 
speech."

Geller, as head of a group called `Stop Islamization of America', helped spur a 
months-long campaign two years ago to remove a planned Islamic community center 
blocks from the World Trade Center site, which she called the "ground zero 
mosque." Plans to build a larger center are pending, although Muslims still 
have regular prayer services at a mosque in the building.

When the ad ran in San Francisco from Aug. 13 to Sept. 4, transit officials 
took the unusual step of running disclaimers on the sides of the buses, while 
some artists painted over "Jihad" or pictures altered in Photoshop that said 
instead, "Defeat Racism."

Geller's group has also placed ads in Metro-North Railroad stations north of 
New York City that read: "It's not Islamophobia, it's Islamorealism."

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority hadn't seen Geller's lawsuit 
on Thursday, spokesman Dan Stessel said. The agency told Geller the ad would be 
"deferred" because of the ongoing violence in the Middle East, he said.

"To be clear, we have not rejected the ad," Stessel said, but "merely asked the 
advertiser to be sensitive to the timing of the placement out of a concern for 
public safety, given current world events."

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