Read Silenced: How Apostasy and Blasphemy Codes Are Choking Freedom Worldwide Online
Authors: Paul Marshall,Nina Shea
Tags: #Religion, #Religion; Politics & State, #Silenced
44
. Baran,
The Other Muslims
, 2, 189.
45
. George Weigel,
The Cube and the Cathedral
(New York: Basic Books, 2005), 141.
46
. In contrast, the United States has “hate-crimes” legislation but not hate-speech bans or blasphemy crimes, due to the free speech protections in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Incitement to violence is a crime in the United States only when the expression is directed to inciting violence that is likely and imminent.
47
. “Report on the Relationship Between Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Religion: The Issue of Regulation and Prosecution of Blasphemy, Religious Insult and Incitement to Religious Hatred,” adopted by the Venice Commission at its 76th Plenary Session (Venice, 17–18 October 2008), 11,
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/religion/IV1.htm
.
48
. Ezra Levant, “Rev. Stephen Boissoin’s Conviction Overturned,” blog entry,
http://ezralevant.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?IncludeBlogs=1&search=HRC
.
49
. Grim and Finke,
The Price of Freedom Denied: Religious Persecution and Violence in the 21st Century
.
50
. Elizabeth Powers, “Liberty for All Free Speech is the American Way,”
The Weekly Standard
, April 19, 2010. C. Edwin Baker finds that hate-speech regulation has no real effect on curbing “hate”; see Ivan Hare and James Weinstein, eds.,
Extreme Speech and Democracy
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2010).
51
. In his June 4, 2009 Cairo speech, President Obama pledged to “fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear.” Lamin Sanneh rightly asks “why Catholic and other religious groups cannot be given the same degree of enforcement of their religious rights”; see “President Obama and America’s New Beginning with Islam: A Response” (unpublished paper, Yale University, June 4, 2009), available through Professor Sanneh.
52
. Robert M. Gates, speech, April 14, 2008,
http://www.defense.gov/speeches/speech.aspx?speechid=1228
. As Farr observes, “There is no systematic approach to what ought to be a central task of U.S. national security strategy, namely, understanding the religious wellsprings of Islamist extremism and its origins in places such as Saudi Arabia. There is too little thought given to supporting religious actors capable of altering the climate of opinion that nurtures the terrorists, their extremist religious views, and the export of those views.” See Thomas Farr,
World of Faith and Freedom
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), 218. However, traditional Muslims, precisely because they have not pursued a religiously based political agenda, lack a national infrastructure, and their organizations are virtually invisible to state and national governments. Western governments tend to rely heavily in their Muslim outreach on individuals and institutions that are prominent simply because they have Saudi and Gulf support, often espousing views starkly at odds with fundamental freedoms of speech and religion; see Hedieh Mirahmadi, “Navigating Islam in America,” in Baran,
The Other Muslims
, 29; Nina Shea and James Woolsey, “What About Muslim Moderates?”
Wall Street Journal
, July 10, 2007.
53
. ICCPR Article 20(2), calling for states to ban “incitement to religious hostility,” is commonly cited as the legal authority for mandating laws against religious hate speech, but it was proposed by the Soviet bloc, Saudi Arabia, and some other authoritarian states; no Western European state voted for it. See Stephanie Farrior,
Molding the Matrix: The Historical and Theoretical Foundations of International Law Concerning Hate Speech, Berkeley Journal of International Law
14, no. 1 (1996): n. 231. Eleanor Roosevelt, representing the United States, warned that it was a provision “likely to be exploited by totalitarian States for the purpose of rendering the other articles null and void.” Upon signing the ICCPR, the United States provided as follows: (1) the U.S. understands that Article 20 “does not authorize or require legislation or other action by the United States that would restrict the right of free speech and association protected by the Constitution and laws of the United States”; (2) “For the United States, article 5, paragraph 2, which provides that fundamental human rights existing in any State Party may not be diminished on the pretext that the Covenant recognizes them to a lesser extent, has particular relevance to article 19, paragraph 3 which would permit certain restrictions on the freedom of expression..” The U.K. delegate echoed this concern: “Unscrupulous governments like nothing better than a moral justification for their actions.”
INDEX54
. Christian Caryl, “A Eulogy for Pakistan,”
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
, March 16, 2011,
http://www.rferl.org/content/pakistan_bhatti_washington/2340390.html
; Lela Gilbert, “Pakistan and Blasphemy: A Matter of Life and Death,”
Jerusalem Post
, April 21, 2011,
http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=217432
; “Pakistani and US Leaders Urge Tolerance, Harmony in Minister Shahbaz Bhatti Memorial Service at the Embassy,” Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan press release, March 10, 2011,
http://www.embassyofpakistanusa.org/news474_03102011.php
Abbasids, 14, 74, 79, 288, 297
Abdullah, King of Jordan, 122
Abdullah, King of Saudi Arabia, 27, 28, 29, 32, 33
Aboutaleb, Ahmed, 267, 277, 323
Abu-Zayd, Nasr Hamid, 8, 13, 34, 76–77, 287–288
essay by, 289–294
Afghanistan, 9, 101–116
Islamic Constitution, 104
overview, 102
safe haven for Al-Qaeda, 102
Taliban activities, 102–103
Africa, 133–148
overview 134–135
See also individual African countries
Aghajari, Hashem, 55–56, 60
Ahadi, Mina, 281
Ahmadi religion, 89
Ahmadiyyah
, defined, 89
Ahmadinejad, Mahmoud, Iranian president, 37
anti-Semitic remarks of, 42, 49, 224, 346n74
criticized by Montazeri, 57–58
deterioration of rights under, 8, 42, 50, 51, 60
reaction to cartoons, 190
reaction to Regensburg address, 198
Ahmadis, persecuted or repressed, 310
in Bangladesh, 149–153
in Indonesia, 159–162
in Malaysia, 169
in Pakistan, 83, 84, 86, 87, 89–92
Al Qimni, Sayed, 61, 72, 75, 78, 80–81
Al-Azhar University (Cairo), 72, 74
censorship powers of, 72
fatwas issued against Baha’is, 8, 63–65
judges Abu-Zayd apostate, 76
See also
Mansour, Ahmed Subhy; Tantawi, Muhammad Sayyed
Al-Banna, Gamal, 72, 74–76
Al-Ghamdi, Sa’id ibn Nasser, Wahhabi theorist, 34
Al-Qaeda, 9, 155, 318, 283
in Africa, 134, 138, 139
in Arabia and Yemen, 32, 34, 130
kills mostly Muslims, 326
safe haven in Afghanistan, 102
threatens Westerners, 192, 193, 194, 201, 259, 266
threatens reformers
Abu-Zayd, xiv
Al Qimni, 61
Mansour, 80
Al-Sadat, Anwar.
See
Sadat
Al-Shabab movement, 10, 134, 138–140, 194, 311
Al-Turabi, Hassan, 143, 147–148
Alevis, Turkish Muslim group, 9, 183, 311
persecuted, 127, 129–130
Algeria, 20, 118–122
Brigitte Bardot on, 238
moderate, 20
reaction to Christian evangelism, 9, 119, 311
relatively secular, 118, 131
Ali Bhutto, Pakistani prime minister, 85
Ali Jinnah, Muhammad, Pakistani founder, 80
Allah, xvii, 55, 100,
and throughout
higher than clerical judgments, 55
identified with state or regime, 59, 315
named in militant predictions, 261–262
Malaysian ban on use of name by non-Muslims, 165–166
See also
God
Allam, Magdi, 285, 323
Anglican Church, 271–272
and blasphemy laws, 234, 251
Anglicans, 46, 249
animist religion, 84, 135, 147
anti-Semitism, 214, 224, 237, 329
in Muslim countries, 49, 155, 209, 279, 324, 346n74
apostasy, 33,
and throughout
Abu-Zayd accused of, 76–77
Abu-Zayd’s accuser accused of, 77
case study of, 35–36
death penalty for, 8, 10, 13, 142
strongly supported in Pakistan, 86
essay of Abu-Zayd on, 295–303
in Iranian law, 38–39, 39–41
not punished by the Prophet, 75
remarks of Abu-Zayd on, 293–294
threats of death for, 279
traditional Muslim law on, 295–298
vague use of, 20
Apple Computer Corporation, 15
Arman, Yasser, 147
Armenian Apostolic Church, 46
Armenians, 122, 128
art
protest against works of, 263–267
Assemblies of God, 46, 47
Assyrian Catholic Church, 197
Assyrian Church of the East, 46
Assyrian Evangelical Church, 46, 48
Ates, Seyran, 273, 326
Australia, 153, 198, 231
religious vilification laws, 249–250, 321, 329
See also
Catch the Fire Ministries case
Baha’i religion, 61
Muslim objections to, 41, 310
origin of, 41
Baha’is
championed by Montazeri, 58
defended by Al-Banna, 76
persecution of
in Afghanistan, 310
in Egypt, 63–65
in Iran, 41–46
in Yemen, 9
Bangladesh, 85, 172, 178, 180, 203
bans books of Taslima Nasreen, 154
persecution of Ahmadis.
See
Ahmadis
persecution of Christian converts, 153
prosecutes Choudury, 155–156
prosecutes Rahman, 156–158
Bardot, Brigitte, 12, 248, 257, 321
Benedict XVI, Pope, 285
on violence against Christians, 95
See also
Regensburg address
Bhatti, Shahbaz, 9, 94, 216, 315
champions religious minorities, 94
eulogy for, excerpt, 100
killed by Al-Qaeda and Taliban, 99–100
Bible(s), 7, 36, 196, 239, 249, 252
as evidence of apostasy, 101
as evidence of proselytizing, 101–102, 120
confiscated or destroyed, 120, 166
lead to murder of possessor, 140
permitted in some Muslim countries, 125
restricted or outlawed, 46, 108, 165, 382n3
bin Laden, Osama, 148, 177
criticized by Hirsi Ali, 244
in Al Qimni book title, 78
on Danish cartoons, 192