Michelle Malkin
Feb 1, 2006
Something very important is happening in Denmark -- a showdown over
freedom, tolerance, and their wolfish menaces in religious clothing.
So, please, turn off "American Idol," put down the Game Boy for a
moment, and pay attention. This does affect you.
Last October, a Danish newspaper called the Jyllands-Posten published a
dozen cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. The illustrations included
various depictions of the prophet Muhammad, some innocuous (Muhammad
walking in a pasture) and a few with provocative references to radical
Islamic terrorism. One showed Muhammad with a bomb in his turban;
another had Muhammad wielding a sword in front of two, wide-eyed Muslim
women covered in black abayas; another featured a cartoonist hunched
over his desk, sweating in fear, as he drew Muhammad in suicide
bomb-like apparel.
The newspaper was making a vivid editorial point about European
artists' fear of retaliation for drawing any pictures of Muhammad at
all. (Remember: It's been a little over a year since Dutch filmmaker
Theo van Gogh was murdered by an Islamist gunman over his movie
criticizing violence against women in Islamic societies.) A Danish
author had reported last fall that he couldn't find an illustrator for
a book about Muhammad; the Jyllands-Posten editors rose to the
challenge by calling on artists to send in their submissions and
publishing the 12 entries they received in response
(available
here).
The reaction to the cartoons has resoundingly confirmed the fears those
artists expressed about radical Islamic intolerance and violence. In
fact, the Jyllands-Posten reported, two of the illustrators received
death threats and went into hiding. The Pakistani Jamaaat-e-Islami
party placed a 5,000-kroner bounty on the cartoonists' heads. A
terrorist outfit called the "Glory Brigades" has threatened suicide
bombings in Denmark over the artwork.
Despite how relatively tame the pictures actually are (compared not
only to Western standards, but also to the vicious, anti-Semitic
propaganda regularly churned out by Arab cartoonists), the drawings
have literally inflamed the radical Muslim world and its apologists.
Eleven Muslim ambassadors to Copenhagen immediately protested to Danish
Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen demanding retractions from the
newspaper. The ambassador of Turkey urged Rasmussen to call the
Jyllands-Posten to account for "abusing Islam in the name of democracy,
human rights and freedom of expression."
Rasmussen, in a rare show of European spine, steadfastly refused to
appease the howlers.
As a result, anti-Denmark sentiment has simmered over the last four
months, and it boiled over this past week. In Gaza City, masked
Palestinian gunmen representing the so-called Religion of Peace raided
a European Union office to protest the cartoons. Muslims burned Danish
flags and banners depicting Rasmussen (American and Norwegian flags, as
well as portraits of President Bush, were thrown into the fire for good
measure). A Danish company, Arla Foods, reports that two of its
employees in Saudi Arabia were beaten by angry customers. Danish aid
workers are evacuating Gaza in fear for their lives.
The country now faces an international boycott from Muslim nations
whose fist-clenched protesters led chants this week of "War on Denmark,
Death to Denmark" while firing bullets in the air.
Soft-on-terror mouthpieces are blaming the messenger for the
conflagration. Former appeaser-in-chief Bill Clinton condemned the
cartoons as "appalling" and "totally outrageous." Where was Clinton's
condemnation of the gun-wielding, death-threat-issuing, flag-burning
bullies of Islam who have targeted Denmark for jihad?
On the Internet, supporters of free speech have launched a "Buy Danish"
campaign in solidarity with the nation under siege. But this isn't just
about Denmark. American-based Muslim activists are on an angry campaign
to stifle the speech of talk show hosts (most recently, KFI morning
host Bill Handel in Los Angeles) who offend their sensibilities. And on
Tuesday afternoon in advance of the State of the Union address, the
Council on American-Islamic Relations issued an ultimatum warning
President Bush to "avoid the use of hot-button terms such as
'Islamo-fascism,' 'militant jihadism,' 'Islamic radicalism' or
'totalitarian Islamic empire'" in his speech -- in other words,
advising Bush not to identify our enemies for the sake of tolerance and
diversity.
First, they came for the cartoonists. Then, they came for the
filmmakers and talk show hosts and namers of evil. Next, who knows?