Sunday, May 10, 2015
Perspective: Patience is proper Islamic response to Garland event | Salaam Bhatti
They appear as children prone to temper tantrums who are quick to write blogs about Islam and Muslims, blogs riddled with errors, fabrications, and flat-out lies — yet their readers take them as fact.
Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source/Credit: The Star-Telegram
By Salaam Bhatti | MAY 6, 2015
American extremists returned to media coverage last week by descending on Garland.
They wasted no time from their last plots of creating disorder, targeting major American cities like San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and New York City. Each attack on American minds went through without failure.
Of course, this is a reference to the Islamophobes who came to Texas to hold a contest about drawing Prophet Muhammad for a prize of $10,000. In response, two renegades drove to the event, opened fire and were killed by police.
This Islamophobic contest, like the anti-Islam ads that littered major cities over the past several years, is legal.
After all, in America, freedom of speech applies to any speech that does not promote imminent violence.
Hate speech is legal. Yet, just because one has the freedom to do something does not mean it should be used to such extremes.
Garry Trudeau, creator of Doonesbury, in his George Polk Career Award acceptance speech, said, “At some point, free-expression absolutism becomes childish and unserious.”
The bigoted Islamophobes and their group of anti-Islam personalities fall in this camp.
They appear as children prone to temper tantrums who are quick to write blogs about Islam and Muslims, blogs riddled with errors, fabrications, and flat-out lies — yet their readers take them as fact.
This firebrand anti-Islam circus is eerily reminiscent to treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany.
Nazis often used anti-Semitic cartoons in the years leading up to Kristallnacht, which made violence against Jews a tolerable affair.
The global anti-Islamic propaganda that flows through marketing and media has undoubtedly desensitized radicals to burning Qurans, defacing mosques and harming and killing Muslims.
In fact, anti-mosque activity is so rife in America that the ACLU has a map dedicated to tracking it, and it isn’t a pretty picture.
Yet, all is not lost. What is the antidote to such bigotry, and what is the proper Islamic response?
Far from the vulgar and false portrayal of Prophet Muhammad the Islamophobic contest attempted to legitimize, it is Prophet Muhammad himself who taught how to respond to hate directed at him.
Muhammad helped a lady who was leaving town because she heard there was a magician named Muhammad who cast spells on people.
When they reached her destination, she asked for his name. Muhammad replied that he was the same Muhammad she earlier feared.
Read original post here: Perspective: Patience is proper Islamic response to Garland event | Salaam Bhatti
This content-post is archived for backup and to keep archived records of any news Islam Ahmadiyya. The views expressed by the author and source of this news archive do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of Ahmadiyya Times. Ahmadiyya Times is not an organ of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, nor in any way associated with any of the community's official websites.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your comments. Any comments irrelevant to the post's subject matter, containing abuses, and/or vulgar language will not be approved.