Hi all,
As some of you know i didnt login to KOTCT for a month and a half as i was studying and examening for my PhD. When i returned back i was so happy that i wasnt forgotten as it happened on the CCF. Many members sent me Birthday greetings whether by mail or posted it on the site. Others even sent me mail to make sure that everything is OK. So Thank you all my friends very much.
I tried to read what i missed, and i was very sad to read a joke on God and Prophet Muhammed.
http://membersforum.knightsofthecointable.com/index.php?topic=1491.0 I was also disappointed that this joke was posted on: June 19, 2008, 03:23:55 AM and since then none of the members or the Moderators have replied to it. I assumed that when the members didnt reply, it is a sign of disscontent or at least they had nothing to say, but what about the Moderators.
The Liar's Bench aka... Pickle Barrel forum has a tip below it that says "Tell your whoppers here! - Just keep it civil".?!!!! And i dont think that telling a joke on God, or any Prophet is civil whatever your believes are !!! I think that one should respect others beleives whether i agree or disagree with it.
I would like to note that, my response and feelings will be the same if it was on Christ, Moses or any other prophet. I hesitated many times to post a reply on the forum, but i couldnt tolerate to just stand still.Dear friends,
As a loyal member to multicultural coin community, i was extremely saddened to read a posted joke on the Prophet Muhammad...I am sure that it was posted with no ill-intentions. However the repercussions are deeper than that. Allow me to explain and elaborate.
Let's recall few instances: When the Danish newspaper Jyllands Posten published a series of cartoons lampooning the Prophet Muhammad, the editors probably expected Muslims to respond with the same timidity and indifference that has characterized Christian responses to religious provocation and blasphemy. The editors couldn't have been more wrong.
Salman Rushdie probably thought he was being deliciously iconoclastic when he published
The Satanic Verses in which he portrayed the Prophet Muhammad's sexual fantasies and compared his wives to prostitutes. This kind of thing goes over big in the literary salons of the West. Iranian leader, Ayatollah Khomeyni, on the other hand, issued a death fatwa against the author.
Obviously, in the Muslim world, blasphemy is a big deal. But if Muslim intolerance has gone too far, have Christians taken tolerance to excess? In America blasphemy is a fashionable way for art to challenge conventional norms. Remember the fellow who got a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for his photograph depicting a crucifix immersed in urine?
Evangelical Christians and conservative Catholics are frequently portrayed by secular liberals as fierce religious fanatics who are trying to impose their morality on others and perhaps even to turn America into a theocracy. But what is striking about conservative Christians is how passive and invertebrate so many of them are when their deepest beliefs are violated. The distinguishing quality of the Christian seems to be "niceness" (
Turning the other cheek as originating from the Sermon on the Mount in the New Testament is to respond to an aggressor without violence). Lets be clear that I don't mean this "niceness" as a compliment. When a man calls your wife a whore it is not a virtue to respond with niceness. When your religion is mocked and blasphemed, it is sign of cowardice to pretend not to notice.
Muslims don't. Activist Muslims were not amused by Rushdie's book, and they are equally incensed about the Danish newspaper's cartoons showing Muhammad wearing a turban with a lit fuse, and Muhammad telling would-be suicide bombers that they should slow down because heaven is running out of virgins. Protests have erupted across the Islamic world, and there have been calls to ban Danish products.
The reaction of newspapers in Europe has been to reprint the offensive cartoons in the name of freedom of expression. "We would have done exactly the same thing if it had been a pope, rabbi or priest caricature," wrote the editor of France Soir. He was reflecting the secular view of fairness. This concept of fairness was exhibited when Muslims complained that school girls were prohibited from wearing Islamic dress. The French government responded by declaring that Christians could not wear crosses either. Look, say the French, we are being fair by discriminating equally against all religions. This was the point being made by the editor of the paper: we are insulting the Muslims just like we routinely insult Jews and Christians.
When the movie "The Last Temptation of Christ" came out several years ago, it was shown to critical acclaim throughout the West despite its blasphemous portrayal of Christ's sexual fantasies at Calvary.
The only countries that banned the movie were the Muslim countries (with the exception of Qatar). The reason is that Muslims consider Christ, like Moses, to be a prophet. Not only do Muslims protect the reputation of Muhammad, but apparently they also care about how Christ is portrayed as well. Whose reputation silent Christians are protecting is anybody's guess.