The Menagerie

February 26, 2006

The Raid

In 1994 I went to New Zealand to visit Mum and then she came back with me to Australia. I had organised a 4WD and we drove from Darwin down to the Alice.
Now the troopie didn’t have a cassette deck and the radio reception fizzled out so we talked and sang and talked a lot. I have wonderful memories of that trip.
It was also unusual in that Mum talked about some of her experiences during WWII as a teenager in occupied Holland. She mentioned the raids that took away young men without warning and families would not know what had happened. She actually saw a round up happen and the men were put on the train she was on in her carriage. She gathered their names and sent letters to their families to let them know. Those boys would end up working as slave labour or end up dead. Dad being of the same age spent 2 years living out bush because it was too dangerous to return home after he was involved in a Resistance effort that stopped a train. My uncle wasn’t so lucky and was picked up to work in a Uboat factory.

I read this blog and this reminds me so much of the stuff my mother shared. Except the enemy is not Hitler, it’s the US Army and Iraqi security forces.

Saturday, February 11, 2006

The Raid…
We were collected at my aunts house for my cousins birthday party a few days ago. J. just turned 16 and my aunt invited us for a late lunch and some cake. It was a very small gathering- three cousins- including myself- my parents, and J.’s best friend, who also happened to be a neighbor.

The lunch was quite good- my aunt is possibly one of the best cooks in Baghdad. She makes traditional Iraqi food and for J.’s birthday she had prepared all our favorites- dolma (rice and meat wrapped in grape leaves, onions, peppers, etc.), beryani rice, stuffed chicken, and some salads. The cake was ready-made and it was in the shape of a friendly-looking fish, J.’s father having forgotten she was an Aquarius and not a Pisces when he selected it, “I thought everyone born in February was a Pisces…” He explained when we pointed out his mistake.

When it was time to blow out the candles, the electricity was out and we stood around her in the dark and sang “Happy Birthday” in two different languages. She squeezed her eyes shut briefly to make a wish and then, with a single breath, she blew out the candles. She proceeded to open gifts- bear pajamas, boy band CDs, a sweater with some sparkly things on it, a red and beige book bag… Your typical gifts for a teenager.

The gift that made her happiest, however, was given by her father. After she’d opened up everything, he handed her a small, rather heavy, silvery package. She unwrapped it hastily and gasped with delight, “Baba- it’s lovely!” She smiled as she held it up to the light of the gas lamp to show it off. It was a Swiss Army knife- complete with corkscrew, nail clippers, and a bottle opener.

“You can carry it around in your bag for protection when you go places!” He explained. She smiled and gingerly pulled out the blade, “And look- when the blade is clean, it works as a mirror!” We all oohed and aahed our admiration and T., another cousin, commented she’d get one when the Swiss Army began making them in pink.

I tried to remember what I got on my 16th birthday and I was sure it wasn’t a knife of any sort.

By 8 pm, my parents and J.’s neighbor were gone. They had left me and T., our 24-year-old female cousin, to spend a night. It was 2 am and we had just gotten J.’s little brother into bed. He had eaten more than his share of cake and the sugar had made him wild for a couple of hours.

We were gathered in the living room and my aunt and her husband, Ammoo S. [Ammoo = uncle] were asleep. T., J. and I were speaking softly and looking for songs on the radio, having sworn not to sleep before the cake was all gone. T. was playing idly with her mobile phone, trying to send a message to a friend. “Hey- there’s no coverage here… is it just my phone?” She asked. J. and I both took out our phones and checked, “Mine isn’t working either…” J. answered, shaking her head. They both turned to me and I told them that I couldn’t get a signal either. J. suddenly looked alert and made a sort of “Uh-oh” sound as she remembered something. “R.- will you check the telephone next to you?” I picked up the ordinary telephone next to me and held my breath, waiting for a dial tone. Nothing.

“There’s no dial tone… but there was one earlier today- I was online…”

J. frowned and turned down the radio. “The last time this happened,” she said, “the area was raided.” The room was suddenly silent and we strained our ears. Nothing. I could hear a generator a couple of streets away, and I also heard the distant barking of a dog- but there was nothing out of the ordinary.

T. suddenly sat up straight, “Do you hear that?” She asked, wide-eyed. At first I couldn’t hear anything and then I caught it- it was the sound of cars or vehicles- moving slowly. “I can hear it!” I called back to T., standing up and moving towards the window. I looked out into the darkness and couldn’t see anything beyond the dim glow of lamps behind windows here and there.

“You won’t see anything from here- it’s probably on the main road!” J. jumped up and went to shake her father awake, “Baba, baba- get up- I think the area is being raided.” I heard J. call out as she approached her parents room. Ammoo S. was awake in moments and we heard him wandering around for his slippers and robe asking what time it was.

Meanwhile, the sound of cars had gotten louder and I remembered that one could see some of the neighborhood from a window on the second floor. T. and I crept upstairs quietly. We heard Ammoo S. unlocking 5 different locks on the kitchen door. “What’s he doing?” T. asked, “Shouldn’t he keep the doors locked?” We were looking out the window and there was the glow of lights a few streets away. I couldn’t see exactly where they came from, as several houses were blocking our view, but we could tell something extraordinary was going on in the neighborhood. The sound of vehicles was getting louder, and it was accompanied by the sound of clanging doors and lights that would flash every once in a while.

We clattered downstairs and found J. and the aunt bustling around in the dark. “What should we do?” T. asked, wringing her hands nervously. The only time I’d ever experienced a raid was back in 2003 at an uncle’s house- and it was Americans. This was the first time I was to witness what we assumed would be an Iraqi raid.

My aunt was seething quietly, “This is the third time the bastards raid the area in 2 months… We’ll never get any peace or quiet…” I stood at their bedroom door and watched as she made the bed. They lived in a mixed neighborhood- Sunnis, Shia and Christians. It was a relatively new neighborhood that began growing in the late eighties. Most of the neighbors have known each other for years. “We don’t know what they’re looking for… La Ilaha Ila Allah…”

I stood awkwardly, watching them make preparations. J. was already in her room changing- she called out for us to do the same, “They’ll come in the house- you don’t want to be wearing pajamas…”

“Why, will they have camera crews with them?” T. smiled wanly, attempting some humor. No, J. replied, her voice muffled as she put on a sweater, “Last time they made us wait outside in the cold.” I listened for Ammoo S. and heard him outside, taking the big padlock off of the gate in the driveway. “Why are you unlocking everything J.?” I called out in the dark.

“The animals will break down the doors if they aren’t open in three seconds and then they’ll be all over the garden and house… last time they pushed the door open on poor Abu H. three houses down and broke his shoulder…” J. was fully changed, and over her jeans and sweater she was wearing her robe. It was cold.

My aunt had dressed too and she was making her way upstairs to carry down my three-year-old cousin B. “I don’t want him waking up with all the noise and finding those bastards around him in the dark.”

Twenty minutes later, we were all assembled in the living room. The house was dark except for the warm glow of the kerosene heater and a small lamp in the corner. We were all dressed and waiting nervously, wrapped in blankets. T. and I sat on the ground while my aunt and her husband sat on the couch, B. wrapped in a blanket between them. J. was sitting in an armchair across from them. It was nearly 4 am.

Meanwhile, the noises outside had gotten louder as the raid got closer. Every once in a while, you could hear voices calling out for people to open a door or the sharp banging of a rifle against a door.

Last time they had raided my aunts area, they took away four men on their street alone. Two of them were students in their early twenties- one a law student, and the other an engineering student, and the third man was a grandfather in his early sixties. There was no accusation, no problem- they were simply ordered outside, loaded up into a white pickup truck and driven away with a group of other men from the area. Their families haven’t heard from them since and they visit the morgue almost daily in anticipation of finding them dead.

“There will be no problem,” My aunt said sternly, looking at each of us, thin-lipped. “You will not say anything improper and they will come in, look around and go.” Her eyes lingered on Ammoo S. He was silent. He had lit a cigarette and was inhaling deeply. J. said he’d begun smoking again a couple of months ago after having quit for ten years. “Are your papers ready?” She asked him, referring to his identification papers which would be requested. He didn’t answer, but nodded his head silently.

We waited. And waited… I began nodding off and my dreams were interspersed with troops and cars and hooded men. I woke to the sound of T. saying, “They’re almost here…” And lifted my head, groggy with what I thought was at least three hours of sleep. I squinted down at my watch and noted it was not yet 5 am. “Haven’t they gotten to us yet?” I asked.

Ammoo S. was pacing in the kitchen. I could hear him coming and going in his slippers, pausing every now and then in front of the window. My aunt was still on the couch- she sat with B. in her arms, rocking him gently and murmuring prayers. J. was doing a last-minute check, hiding valuables and gathering our handbags into the living room, “They took baba’s mobile phone during the last raid- make sure your mobile phones are with you.”

I could feel my heart pounding in my ears and I got closer to the kerosene heater in an attempt to dispel the cold that seemed to have permanently taken over my fingers and toes. T. was trembling, wrapped in her blanket. I waved her over to the heater but she shook her head and answered, “I…. mmmm… n-n-not… c-c-cold…”

It came ten minutes later. A big clanging sound on the garden gate and voices yelling “Ifta7u [OPEN UP]”. I heard my uncle outside, calling out, “We’re opening the gate, we’re opening…” It was moments and they were inside the house. Suddenly, the house was filled with strange men, yelling out orders and stomping into rooms. It was chaotic. We could see flashing lights in the garden and lights coming from the hallways. I could hear Ammoo S. talking loudly outside, telling them his wife and the ‘children’ were the only ones in the house. What were they looking for? Was there something wrong? He asked.

Suddenly, two of them were in the living room. We were all sitting on the sofa, near my aunt. My cousin B. was by then awake, eyes wide with fear. They were holding large lights or ‘torches’ and one of them pointed a Klashnikov at us. “Is there anyone here but you and them?” One of them barked at my aunt. “No- it’s only us and my husband outside with you- you can check the house.” T.’s hands went up to block the glaring light of the torch and one of the men yelled at her to put her hands down, they fell limply in her lap. I squinted in the strong light and as my sight adjusted, I noticed they were wearing masks, only their eyes and mouths showing. I glanced at my cousins and noted that T. was barely breathing. J. was sitting perfectly still, eyes focused on nothing in particular, I vaguely noted that her sweater was on backwards.

One of them stood with the Klashnikov pointed at us, and the other one began opening cabinets and checking behind doors. We were silent. The only sounds came from my aunt, who was praying in a tremulous whisper and little B., who was sucking away at his thumb, eyes wide with fear. I could hear the rest of the troops walking around the house, opening closets, doors and cabinets.

I listened for Ammoo S., hoping to hear him outside but I could only distinguish the harsh voices of the troops. The minutes we sat in the living room seemed to last forever. I didn’t know where to look exactly. My eyes kept wandering to the man with the weapon and yet I knew staring at him wasn’t a good idea. I stared down at a newspaper at my feet and tried to read the upside-down headlines. I glanced at J. again- her heart was beating so hard, the small silver pendant that my mother had given her just that day was throbbing on her chest in time to her heartbeat.

Suddenly, someone called out something from outside and it was over. They began rushing to leave the house, almost as fast as they’d invaded it. Doors slamming, lights dimming. We were left in the dark once more, not daring to move from the sofa we were sitting on, listening as the men disappeared, leaving only a couple to stand at our gate.

“Where’s baba?” J. asked, panicking for a moment before we heard his slippered feet in the driveway. “Did they take him?” Her voice was getting higher. Ammoo S. finally walked into the house, looking weary and drained. I could tell his face was pale even in the relative dark of the house. My aunt sat sobbing quietly in the living room, T. comforting her. “Houses are no longer sacred… We can’t sleep… We can’t live… If you can’t be safe in your own house, where can you be safe? The animals… the bastards…”

We found out a few hours later that one of our neighbors, two houses down, had died. Abu Salih was a man in his seventies and as the Iraqi mercenaries raided his house, he had a heart-attack. His grandson couldn’t get him to the hospital on time because the troops wouldn’t let him leave the house until they’d finished with it. His grandson told us later that day that the Iraqis were checking the houses, but the American troops had the area surrounded and secured. It was a coordinated raid.

They took at least a dozen men from my aunts area alone- their ages between 19 and 40. The street behind us doesn’t have a single house with a male under the age of 50- lawyers, engineers, students, ordinary laborers- all hauled away by the ‘security forces’ of the New Iraq. The only thing they share in common is the fact that they come from Sunni families (with the exception of two who I’m not sure about).

We spent the day putting clothes back into closets, taking stock of anything missing (a watch, a brass letter opener, and a walkman), and cleaning dirt and mud off of carpets. My aunt was fanatic about cleansing and disinfecting everything saying it was all “Dirty, dirty, dirty…” J. has sworn never to celebrate her birthday again.

It’s almost funny- only a month ago, we were watching a commercial on some Arabic satellite channel- Arabiya perhaps. They were showing a commercial for Iraqi security forces and giving a list of numbers Iraqis were supposed to dial in the case of a terrorist attack… You call THIS number if you need the police to protect you from burglars or abductors… You call THAT number if you need the National Guard or special forces to protect you from terrorists… But…

Who do you call to protect you from the New Iraq’s security forces?

- posted by river @ 12:43 AM

February 25, 2006

Mothering dilemma: am I being a food Nazi?

Filed under: Daily diary, Family & Friends, Parenting, Rants/Opinions — missywombat @ 11:07 pm

I usually make DD’s school lunch. A couple of sandwiches, a piece of fresh fruit and something else – some cheese, dried fruit, a muffin, maybe some chocolate covered whatevers. Preferably something healthy but it doesn’t have to be macrobiotic Pritikin-inspired vegan goodness. It doesn’t even have to be vegetarian even though I am a vegetarian myself. DD had a run of liverwurst sandwiches because I felt it was something she should at least try.

DD has been dying to buy something at the canteen. Its a big thing for a not quite 5 year old Transition girl and last week I gave her enough change that she could buy a treat on top of whatever else was in her lunchbox. She bought noodles and an icy cup and still ate her sandwich and fruit so all was well.

So on Friday when I realised that I was not as organised as I had hoped and there wasn’t much that was interesting in the fridge AND it was the day after Payday, I though I would let Hanna buy her lunch. I have the list of canteen goodies here so we went through it. I did the great “You need to have a sandwich or roll and a piece of fruit” and we discussed the different fillings. So Hanna wanted an egg sandwich and fruit and cake. I was happy for her to spend up to $5 so she could add to that if she wished.

So I found an envelope, wrote her name on it, and wrote on it what we had decided on and put the money in. Before I kissed her goodbye I reminded her she needed to have a sandwich and a piece of fruit. You can’t do too much brainwashing about these things.
At school, she bowled up to the teacher [a different one than usual] and showed her the envelope as the teachers collect the lunch money. Now I made the assumption that there was some kind of order system. I should learn not to do that.

So fast forward to afterschool care and Hanna shows me a sticker she got out of a packet of Kettle chips. OK, she bought chips for the treat part of her lunch. I’m not going to fault that especially as I did exactly the same thing that day. First time in months but when the urge comes on for salt and vinegar chips, it needs to be followed.

So I ask her if she liked her sandwich and what kind of fruit she had. She didn’t have any.

Excuse me?

Yep, she didn’t have the carefully planned sandwich, the piece of fruit and everything else as extras. She bought a bag of chips and JUST a packet of chips.
Bloody hell. And it was the one day that the kids were not given their communication books back and I really, really wanted to ask about how the lunch system operates as obviously I’ve got it all wrong. So Hanna won’t be allowed to have bought lunches because she is too young to be responsible [and that's not her fault, she is just a kid] and I can’t trust what she orders. But I won’t have her eating crap food and running out of steam in the afternoons. That’s what happened to her Dad because his Mum thought that he was big enough to make his own breakfast and could be trusted with buying his lunch. The reality is that he rarely ate breakfast, used to buy lollies with his lunch money and run out of steam by mid-morning and couldn’t think because his brain did not have the right nutrients passing through it.

So I’ll be asking how the system works in great detail.

To top it off when I asked Hanna where her change was, knowing she should have had about $3.70, she went rushing over to the table and then came back all upset because her money had disappeared. My sweet naive young miss found out the hard way that you can’t leave money lying around. So she copped a mini-lecture on putting money away in her schoolbag.

February 19, 2006

Australia attacked from the air

Filed under: Daily diary, In Australia, News and politics, Rants/Opinions — missywombat @ 3:27 pm

Darwin remembers Japanese air raids anniversary. 19/02/2006. ABC News Online

It is a marked disappointment to me that so many Australians are completely unaware that Australia was bombed during WWII on the mainland and subjected to regular attack for at least 18 months. They are aware of the submarines in Sydney Harbour but the 243 people that died during the air raids by the Japanese on February 19, 1943 don’t seem to have penetrated the average Australian’s consciousness.
That is a very significant number of people to die in one day. Much greater than the number of Australians that died in Bali recently. Even significant natural disasters have had smaller death tolls.

Lest we forget or have we forgotten all too easily?

February 6, 2006

Muhammed cartoons – an opinion

It all started off when I posted an article about the Muhammed cartoons being reprinted in New Zealand newspapers last week. IT was then that I suddenly started to take an interest in the issue. Why were newspapers all over the world suddenly starting to take a stand? What was the story behind it?

The I found http://www.welt.de/z/plog/blog.php/the_free_west/the_free_wests_weblog/2006/02/04/the_cartoons–a_chronology

which gives the background to the whole affair. OK, so a newspaper decided to test some ground because an author couldn’t find an illustrator for a chilren’s book about Mohammed.

That didn’t sound entirely unreasonable to me so I went looking for the images. And found them.

http://epaper.jp.dk/30-09-2005/demo/JP_04-03.html

Here’s the post I typed for a discussion board I hang out on:

‘Like Jesus with an erect penis’ m

February 4 2006, 8:15 PM

I think that is the right comparison.

From what little I can see of the cartoons it smacks of religious and possibly racial vilification. We try not to do it about race.
Yes, I believe in freedom of speech but I think there is an obligation to show some respect.

I don’t have a problem with the newspaper publishing a cartoon depicting Mohammed as a test because they wanted to see why an author couldn’t get a book illustrated. I totally have problems with what the editorial desk chose to publish. I think they showed a complete lack of responsibility.

And they didn’t realise the potential effect? Salman Rushdie had a hell of a time and that was well BEFORE Sept 11. That’s not naive. It’s inflammatory.
Well done JP, you probably sold many copies of your newspaper and doubled your yearly profits in one hit.

That is not to say that I believe that Muslims have any right to bomb embassies and the like. Violence is completely wrong. I don’t believe Islam to be a violent faith per se and while people may point the finger at certain parts of the Koran, I can equally point the finger at parts of the Bible. A boycott while extreme to me is tolerable even if it was a single newspaper that is responsible. I’m a huge believer in using the power of the dollar against companies that offend and if need be, whole nations. Hit them where it really hurts – in the hip pocket. It does bring up interesting questions on how Muslims are perceived in Denmark and whether the cartoons reflect the opinions of the general public in Denmark, Europe and the entire Western world.
I’m actually quite pleased that the cartoons have not been published in the UK so far. I find that encouraging. I wonder whether Fairfax, which owns the papers in NZ that republished the cartoons, will publish them here in Australia. I will be watching the SMH and the Age.
And taking it to the UN? Well, if you can convince the UN to take it seriously and you have the resources to get it there, that is a perfectly legal and valid way of tackling the issue. Maybe it will get some people to think about the messages that these cartoons are giving out.

I know I personally hate Polynesian jokes told from outside the racial group that is the butt of the jokes. They just reinforce some awful stereotypes that I have fought throughout my life. They are hurtful and all they do is breed resentment. And those jokes are relatively mild, just annoying.

Humour is most definitely a weapon. Charlie Chaplin used it successfully against Hitler in “The Great Dictator”; pre-WWII anti-semitism used it. Anywhere where a group is persecuted, humour is used. If you want to denigrate a people, create a joke about them and spread it around.

—————————————————————————
By The Copenhagen Post
Caricatures of Mohammed are the same as portraits of Jesus with an erect penis, according to vice prime minister Bendt Bendtsen.

JP extra
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[Se alle]
Freedom of expression is important, but so is respect for other people, according to vice prime minister Bendt Bendtsen.

Bendtsen, the chairman of the conservative party and minister of economic and business affairs, said in an interview with daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten that freedom of speech was an important right, but it also carried with it an obligation to use good judgement.

Jyllands-Posten’s decision to publish 12 caricatures of Mohammed has created a row that has pitted Denmark against the Muslim world.

‘What Jyllands-Posten did is totally legal. I’ve got nothing against freedom of speech – it is important for us all – but if it can offend and hurt a lot of people, why use freedom of speech for that? This is about respecting other people’s cultures,’ Bendtsen said.

Bendtsen compared the 12 Jyllands-Posten caricatures of Mohammed to pictures of Jesus with an erect penis painted by Danish artist Jens Jørgen Thorsen.

‘I was deeply affected by them. I didn’t like them. Those are some of the same emotions,’ he said, pointing out that it was not unheard of for Danes to get upset over misused religious symbols: Two summers ago, a grocery store was forced to stop selling flip flops with pictures of Jesus after religious groups complained.

Bendtsen said Danish newspapers could possibly learn something from US newspapers, which tended not to try to push the limits of what was permissible.

‘In the US, freedom of expression is also important. At the same time, there is also a tradition of showing consideration for others,’ he said.

‘Religion is a deeply personal thing for a lot of people. I felt offended by the pictures of Jesus. Nor was I too keen about the sandals either.’

Another part of the thread started to deal with the original newspaper’s apology.

My response:

Well, I find this apology hypocritical m

February 4 2006, 8:38 PM

but I would accept it.
At least some positive press has also arisen out of it.

But that also leads me to ask what positive press has been published in the countries that chose to print these cartoons.
In NZ Muslims are a definite minority. NZ is pretty tolerant as a whole but it is not perfect.

Here in Australia there are increasing numbers of Muslims especially in certain areas. There are areas with large numbers of Lebanese and Turks. Here in Darwin we have lots of Muslim Indonesians. Life has been much more difficult for them post 9/11 even though Darwin is very accepting of them. The Islamic community here fits in well with the general community and there are opportunities for people to visit the mosque. I certainly feel that I could approach the people at the Mosque if I wanted to find out something.
But I have never seen a feature article about successful Muslims in the news that actually includes mention of their faith.

In NZ there was [is?] a news programme about Polynesians that showed the kind of stories you never saw anywhere else. Biographical items, items about culture, success stories…it was the 30 minutes per week when I got to see people of my own ethnic background portrayed in a positive light. As opposed to the news which reinforced the poor, welfare dependent, badly educated, rugby playing, obese, unhealthy stereotype. The stereotype of Polynesians walking around with jandals on their feet. Nobody ever mentions its because jandals are frequently the only thing available that actually fit and that noone sells decent shoes big enough. Anyway, my brother used to live in Hamilton, and Mum and I would fly up to visit in the school holidays when I was a kid. We lived in a very white part of NZ with very few Maori and Polynesians – there were more Chinese – and Hamilton is very brown in comparison. There came a moment where I realised I was making value judgments on Polynesians based on their dress and colour AND I WAS THE SAME COLOUR AS THEM. Now I certainly had not been taught racist attitudes by my parents so I had absorbed some racist ideas from the dominant culture by sheer osmosis. And the media is very much part of that.

If a newspaper is going to reprint this stuff I think they are obliged to use it as a discussion point. Freedom of the Press/expression by itself as a reason is specious. This is a much deeper issue.

Well, that’s my rant. Hmm, I think this issue has hit a nerve LOL.

I somewhere asked one of my friends for her take on it. She is an American married to a Turkish Muslim who is now in the US Army and has done a stint in Iraq.

Here’s her post:

I haven’t read all of your comments but here is my take (m)

February 5 2006, 12:50 PM

We HAVE to reprint them so people can see what all the fuss is about: Bullshit. People can see these anywhere there is an internet cafe. There is no reason to reprint them.

Islam does not allow the characterization of ANY thing with a soul in art. Yes this rule has softened a bit over time, but you will never ever see a depiction of Mohammed bad or good drawn by a Muslim. In Ottoman tilework tiles with birds would be spilt in half (symbolizing that the bird was dead) and then tiled up next to one another. Christianity has long been celebrated in art and has no taboo against it. That is why it is different than having cartoons of Jesus and other prophets. So you cannot make the argument that A is ok so B is ok.

When the Okalahoma Federal building was bombed no one drew depictions of Jesus in a suicide vest or riding on a bomb laden donkey even though the people responsible were fundamentalist Christians. The characterization of Mohammed as a terrorist is the same as saying all muslims are terrorists. How would devout Jews feel about a depiction of a Jewish couple holding a baby pig at a bris? There is a difference between freedom of speech/press and slander. Slander is illegal and never appropriate.

I have the right to say that some muslims are terrorists and draw cartoons about it but I have no right to say that Mohammed and therfor all of his followers are terrorists. The last IMHO is slander.

Should this incident be an excuse to violent protest and the burning of Dutch embassies? Absolutely not, but the Muslim people do have the right to be heard. Muslim leaders have asked for these cartoons not to be reprinted and their request has not been granted. German officilas do not allow neo-nazi cartoons or sentiment to be published in their newspapers, but they did allow this. What is the difference? To me there shouldn’t be any. A newspaper has the right to sensor itself and sometimes must in order to be on the side of morality.

I’ve also heard the argument banded about that because certain Islamic newspapers publish anti-semittic (sp?) cartoons, that it is ok for these other newspapers to publish anti-Islamic cartoons. This is the same as saying, my neighbour beats his wife so its ok if I do too. Someone has to take the moral highground or we are all in danger.

You know, it strikes me that I haven’t seen any article during my casual surfing sessions around the topic deal with the prohibition of drawing Mohammed and what that is all about. Why didn’t JP actually look at the reason why they couldn’t find an illustrator for the children’s books? I have to ask how something so obvious could have been excluded. Is Western society becoming that blinkered and intolerant that it can forget to ask what should have been a basic inquiry?

This issue is so much deeper than the issue of democracy and freedom of expression. Why aren’t the words “responsibility”, “integrity” and “inquiry” being heard? Not to mention “tolerance”.

For something that last week I didn’t give a hoot about, this issue is bugging me bigtime.

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