So its been a while since I last posted. I had a really intense week last week due to the writing of a 20 page paper on Islam and Nonviolence. I had a great time writing it, but then again, it was a paper that was "due" and that's never fun. If I get good grade I'll post an excerpt or two.
So today's blog post comes to you courtesy of Daniel Pipes. He's in the Bernard Lewis-Sam Huntington school of thought, but he's good for blog inspiration.
Today I found a little thingie he wrote about some Islamic government officials pushing for an internation law that would make it illegal to trash talk people's religions. Now obviously, these officials want a law to protect Islam and not necessarily any other religion, but I think the idea of an international law protecting religion is a pretty okay idea.
A law as such shouldn't make it illegal for anyone to criticise a religion, but rather to extend laws against hate crimes to include violence against religious traditions (that is if it does not already do so) and to ensure that every religious community is being given their freedom. Now such a law may already exist, I don't feel like trolling through all the UN resolutions that have ever been passed.
Islam is completely compatible with this idea. Back in the day, Islamic societies were waaayy more progressive in preserving religious freedom for non-Muslims than the European societies were with minority faith traditions. To back up this claim, I'm going to give the link to one of the resources I used for my paper. It's a fairly extensive look at the relationship between Muslims and non-Muslims, and the best characterization that honors all parties involved.
To read Islam, Nonviolence, and Interfaith Relations by M. Mazzahim Mohideen, click on the link, then scroll all the way down to the last chapter of the collection and click on that. You'll be downloading it in a PDF format.
PS. I wore that sign for a part in a play. I was not wandering around DC wearing that and blending in with some of the crazies in front of the White House. No, just some theater crazies.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Respeck!
Posted by The Odalisque at 1:50 PM
Labels: center for global nonviolence, daniel pipes, good anthropology bad islam, international law, Islam and nonviolence, m. mazzahim mohideen, religion
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