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 That Defining Moment:  On Anti-Muslim Films, Cartoons, and My Gaza 
	Neighbor  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 1, 2012 
 A neighbor of mine, of many years ago from a Gaza refugee camp, 
	was a sacrilegious person par excellence. Unemployed like most inhabitants 
	of the camp, he was extremely poor. His family responsibilities were 
	daunting, yet prolonged Israeli military curfews made it impossible for him 
	to find a job, let alone venture outside his miserable one-bedroom house to 
	puff on cheap brand cigarettes, which he often borrowed from some other 
	neighbor.
 
 When life pushed Ghassan beyond his ability to cope, he 
	would go to his house’ courtyard and begin to shout, shrieking most 
	imaginative profanities against everything sacred. His howls would often end 
	with muffled cries and tears, especially once he realized that he had 
	crossed every sacred line there was to cross, including those pertaining to 
	God, the Prophets (no one in specific) and all the holy books.
 
 But 
	when Israeli soldiers dragged Ghassan out of his house and ordered him to 
	curse at Allah and to insult the Prophet Mohammed - otherwise they would 
	have beaten him senseless - he obstinately refused. It’s not that the man 
	would not compromise, for he had already walked on all fours, barked like a 
	dog and spit grudgingly at a poster of Yasser Arafat. But Allah and the 
	Prophet is where he drew the line. Ghassan retold the story many times, even 
	long after the scars on his face healed, and his broken arm was once again 
	useful. And in no time, he resumed his regular blasphemy whenever life 
	pushed him passed that dreadful, breaking point.
 
 During military 
	curfews, Israeli soldiers often got bored. When all refugees were locked in, 
	and no stone-throwing kids taunted them in the camp’s small alleys, the 
	soldiers would break down a few rickety doors and entertain themselves by 
	humiliating hapless refugees. The practice was widespread and recurring. Men 
	and boys would often comply with all sorts of requests, but many remained 
	steadfast when the soldiers’ demands reached God and the Prophet. Many bones 
	were broken that way, too many to count.
 
 Spiritual, religious 
	figures and symbols often represent the last hope to which poor, humiliated 
	and disenfranchised people cling onto with absolute ferocity, for that hope 
	is their last line of defense. Without it, all is lost.
 
 Palestine 
	has often served as a microcosm for a larger ailment, which many Muslims see 
	as the lowest point of their collective humiliation that spans generations. 
	Although Muslim solidarity with Palestinians is often wrapped up in 
	religious symbols and slogans, in reality it is the degradation of the 
	individual (as a representation of the Ummah – the nation) that troubles 
	them most.
 
 Palestine, however, is no longer the only low point. In 
	the last two decades, other Muslim nations joined a growing list: 
	Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, Libya and so on.
 
 Insulting Islamic symbols often represents that breaking point for many 
	Muslims. The phenomenon is too obvious to miss. Long before Salman Rushdie’s 
	‘Satanic Verses’ became a cause célèbre among western governments and 
	intellectuals, supposedly so keen on shielding ‘freedom of speech’ from the 
	hordes of vengeful Muslims: Offending Muslims somehow managed to survive all 
	phases of political correctness that western countries experienced in recent 
	decades.
 
 It was hardly surprising that the latest anti-Islam video 
	– The Innocence of Muslims – was directed by a pornographer, promoted by 
	rightwing hatemongers, and championed by the very self-righteous 
	‘intellectual’ elements that hailed every American military adventure in 
	Muslim countries. Those who are using the film, and the much violence and 
	anger it generated, to preach ‘freedom of expression’ and such, are either 
	willfully ignorant or know nothing of the political context behind all of 
	this.
 
 Similarly, it was not the single act of the Danish newspaper 
	Jyllands-Posten publishing of the offensive Mohammed’s cartoons in 2005, nor 
	Pastor Terry Jones’ burning of the Holy Quran antics in 2010 that enraged 
	many Muslims. It was the identity of the perpetrators – as western, American 
	– that placed the insults in an already unbearable political context: The 
	sexual and physical abuse of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib, the insanity of 
	Bagram prison in Afghanistan, the torture and unlawful imprisonment of 
	Muslim detainees in Guantanamo, the millions of dead, maimed and displaced 
	and a thousand more such examples.
 
 Those who insist on placing 
	‘Muslim rage’ (the cover story of a recent Newsweek edition) within some 
	futile discussion over freedom of speech are only confusing the issue. 
	Offensive cartoons targeting Prophet Mohammed were published in numerous 
	countries including newspapers in Africa, South America and even some Arab 
	countries. There was no uproar. South Africa’s Mail and Guardian is 
	notorious for attempting to add fuel to the fire, desperate for 
	international attention. In 2010, shortly before the World Cup, cartoonist 
	Jonathan Shapiro hoped to break away into international stardom with an 
	offensive cartoon in the same newspaper, to no avail. Only local Muslim 
	communities reacted, and the issue was more or less forgotten. Why?
 
 Is it because Muslims are more tolerant to freedom of speech in Chile, 
	Estonia and Peru, than the US, Denmark and France? Or is it because the 
	former are involved in no wars that continue to humiliate Muslims, pushing 
	them to the brink like my old Gaza neighbor?
 
 Just as the protests 
	were building momentum, a NATO airstrike on September 16 killed eight women 
	in the Afghani province of Laghman. Thousands of angry Afghans, helpless 
	before the recurring lethal strikes, roamed the streets in tears chanting 
	anti-US slogans, burning US flags and more. Their 'rage' over the film was 
	accentuated by the deadly strike. Few in mainstream media even bothered to 
	link both events, as if the intention is simply to maintain that Muslims are 
	irrational and that their misguided logic is deserving of no consideration 
	whatsoever.
 
 When I saw Pakistani, Afghani, Yemeni, Lebanese and 
	other protesters rallying against the constant provocation emanating from 
	western countries, I couldn’t help but think of Ghassan. Demanding Muslims 
	to become more ‘tolerant’ as their most sacred symbols are being desecrated, 
	while the smoke of NATO bombs continues to fill the Afghani-Pakistani 
	horizon, is not much different than demanding an unemployed, broken and 
	despairing man to sit on all fours, bark like a dog and repeat slurs 
	targeting Prophet Mohammed. As irreverent to religion as Ghassan was, that 
	moment defined his very humanity. He refused to obey the soldiers, and the 
	beating commenced.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London.)
 
   
 
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