web analytics
May 21, 2013 /12 Sivan, 5773
At a Glance
Blogs
Sponsored Post
jumping Following a Passion for Sports to Israel

In Israel, a new five month scholarship program being offered to young aspiring athletes – one of them could be you.



Home » Blogs » CIFWatch »

The Guardian, Muslim Rioting and ‘Cause & Effect’

Citizens of Pakistan, Israel, America, or adults of any faith in any other nation in the world who possess moral agency, can freely chose to engage in senseless rioting over a religious or political insult - thus risking death or injury – or they can choose not to.
tell a friend
Muslim Rioting

Photo Credit: Yori Yanover

An official Guardian editorial on Oct. 1, ‘In praise of the political cartoon,’ commended the Egyptian newspaper Al Watan for “publishing… pictures with the message that the west misunderstands Islam,” which the editorial contrasted with “Charlie Hebdo‘s senselessly inflammatory caricatures of the prophet Muhammad.”

Charlie Hebdo is a French satirical magazine which printed a set of cartoons on Sept. 19 featuring Muhammad which included more than one depicting him naked.

The magazine’s editor, Stephane Charbonnier, explained that they were “using its freedom of expression to comment on the news in a satirical way.” The news he’s referring to is rioting by Muslims throughout the world, beginning in mid-September, in response to the low-budget anti-Islam film ‘Innocence of Muslims.’

In addition to praising the Egyptian cartoons, about the West’s apparent misunderstanding of Islam, the Guardian editorial contrasted such attempts at greater understanding with “…Charlie Hebdo‘s caricatures which, “produced a week of protest, embassy closure, legal complaint and, most gravely, 19 dead [and 160 injured] in Pakistan.”

What the Guardian is referring to is violent rioting, on Sept. 19, in Pakistan’s largest cities – on a day of government-sanctioned protests over the film and cartoon.  According to a New York Times report on the violence, most of the deaths occurred in Karachi, where “protesters burned effigies, stoned a KFC and engaged in armed clashes with the police that left 14 people dead and more than 80 wounded by evening.”

Regardless of the details of the deaths, however, to claim that the Hebdo cartoon – of a man who Muslims believe was a messenger and prophet of God – “produced” the Pakistani deaths is absurd.

The editors of a French satirical magazine do not have blood on their hands.

Citizens of Pakistan, Israel, America, or adults of any faith in any other nation in the world who possess moral agency, can freely chose to engage in senseless rioting over a religious or political insult  - thus risking death or injury – or they can choose not to.

Is such an intuitive understanding of ‘case and effect’, and individual moral responsibility, even debatable?

Visit CifWatch.com.

tell a friend

About the Author: Adam Levick serves as Managing Editor of CiF Watch, an affiliate of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), and is a member of the Online Antisemitism Working Group for the Global Forum to Combat Antisemitism. Adam made Aliyah from Philadelphia in 2009 and lives with his wife in Modi'in.


You might also be interested in:


no comments

You must log in to post a comment.

No Responses to “The Guardian, Muslim Rioting and ‘Cause & Effect’”

  1. There is no film. There is a trailer for a film that does not exist. In fact there is at any given time hundreds, possibly thousands of offensive videos on the internet. To think that the rioters needed something to start them rioting is ridiculous. They are 'self starting'. Like that dog food that makes it's own gravy, these rioters make their own outrage.

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Current Top Story
Paterson, NJ City Hall flew the Palestinian flag on Sunday, May 19, which Paterson Mayor Jeffrey Jones named "Palestinian American Day."
Man Behind Palestinian Flag at Paterson, NJ City Hall a Convicted Felon
Latest Blogs Stories
Mourners at the funeral for the victims of Monday's shooting in Toulouse in Jerusalem, March 21, 2012.

You can’t blame the French for wanting to minimize their made-in-Europe Islamic terror problem. The problem is with how reality keeps messing with comfortable theories.

Rabbi Moshe Grylak

What is really being gained by continuing to force Haredim to stay in the beis medrash full time via a draft that exempts Haredim?

"The relationship between Islam and the West includes centuries of co-existence and cooperation."

The video story was part of a theme that has run through Obama’s presidency from the beginning.

Goldstein 485x300

An interview with Penny Sansevieri, founder and head of Author Marketing Experts.

The Guardian took the hideous claim that the IDF fired mercilessly at a young boy until he was dead at face value, without even a hint of journalistic skepticism.

Two people have reported snow in the late May-early June, though in both cases, it was hearsay.

It seems Russia has decided that the “strong horse” in the Middle East is Iran and the Shiites.

Ouni Abed Botrous Hadaddeen compares the Jordanian king to Yasser Arafat, claiming that Abdullah to is two faced.

If Shas does agree to allow a secular core curriculum in their schools, that will put Ashkenazi Haredi leaders between a rock and a hard place.

What Rav Soloveitchik said in 1974 is truer than ever: normative Judaism is on the defensive in the modern world.

The Ruth story demonstrates how all Jews should treat the strangers among us.

Shavuot reflects the centrality of ‘seven’ in Judaism.

The Egyptian ambassador warned against allowing Jews to pray at the Temple Mount even under a time-share system.

A response to Ahmadinejad’s vitriol from a Jew of Persian descent.

the title rabbi (or its equivalent) is more than about recognition of achievement.

By agreeing with said gangsters that ‘Palestine’ is a state, Google is in effect agreeing that the Jewish people do not have a legitimate state.

More Articles from Adam Levick
Al-Dura

The Guardian took the hideous claim that the IDF fired mercilessly at a young boy until he was dead at face value, without even a hint of journalistic skepticism.

shotei hanevuah2

A raw live version of the Israeli hit ‘Ein Ani’ performed in front of an IDF unit in 2012.

Israeli artist Idan Raichel blends African, Latin American, Caribbean and Middle Eastern sounds.

The mantra that terrorism is only used in reference to Muslims has no basis in fact.

Israeli artist Moshe Ben-Ari writes music with a blend rock, soul, reggae and world music.

Is there really any mystery as to why Vanunu is so admired by the Guardian?

The Guardian’s report noted that “Harding, who is Jewish, will also have to leave behind the pro-Israeli line of the Times.”

Rita’s music reportedly became an underground hit on underground radio stations in some Muslim countries, including Iran.

    Latest Poll

    Which is the most beautiful location in Jerusalem?









    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...

Printed from: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/cifwatch/the-guardian-muslim-rioting-and-cause-effect/2012/10/10/

Scan this QR code to visit this page online:

Close