|
|
| By: Associated Press |
| Published: March 1, 2006 |
| |
Dozens of Muslim students and supporters protested Tuesday at the University of California, Irvine, against plans by organizers of a panel discussion on Islamic extremism to show controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad first published in Danish newspaper.
Members of the Muslim Student Union gathered outside the auditorium where the panel was to convene later in the evening. The Council on American-Islamic Relations - an invited guest - planned a boycott.
The protest began when about 200 Muslim students, many wearing green armbands, placed mats on the barricaded street and said a prayer. When it ended, about 15 counterprotesters raised U.S. and Israeli flags, shouted "USA! USA!" and sang "God bless America."
The debate on the event follows incidents at other campuses, including Harvard University and the University of Illinois, where student newspapers published cartoons, one of which shows the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb in his turban.
Thousands of Muslims worldwide have protested, sometimes violently, against the drawings. They are offensive to Muslims because Islamic tradition bans any depiction of Muhammad.
Osman Umarji, former president of the Muslim Student Union, equated the decision to display the prophet drawings to the debasement of Jews in Germany before the Holocaust.
"The agenda is to spread Islamophobia and create hysteria against Muslims similar to what happened to the Jews in Nazi Germany," said Umarji, an electrical engineer who graduated from UC Irvine last spring. "Freedom of speech has its limits."
Organizers said unveiling the cartoons was part of a larger debate on Islamic extremism sponsored by the College Republicans and The United American Committee, a fledgling group not affiliated with UC Irvine.
Brock Hill, vice president of the College Republicans, said his group had a right to display the cartoons under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and noted that the panel was to include a representative from the Free Muslims Coalition.
"We're not going against Islam whatsoever," he said. "This is about free speech and the free marketplace of ideas."
The panel also was to discuss anti-Semitic and anti-Western drawings that have appeared in Middle Eastern newspapers and discuss Islamic militancy on U.S. college campuses, said Jesse Petrilla, 22, a Glendale Community College student and UAC founder.
Petrilla said he believes Muslims overseas are using the prophet drawings as an excuse to commit violence against Western nations.
"We're hoping to bring light to the subject and get people talking about it," he said. "People don't realize it's not just the cartoons - there's motivation behind it that's rooted far deeper."
Organizers of the Muslim demonstration said the green armbands signified unity and did not represent allegiance to the militant group Hamas.
Kareem Elsayed, 20, a biomedical engineering student, said the Muslim Student Union would donate a health kit to victims of domestic abuse for every person that signed a petition against the unveiling of the cartoons.
"There's a lot of hype about this and we wanted to say we're Muslims and we're compassionate," he said. "They're looking for an event that's destructive, that's pitting civilizations against each other."
Counterprotesters held signs that read "I support the First Amendment." |
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.
|
|
| |
|
| |
|