DUBAI: Depictions of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) such as the cartoons published by the French satirical magazine reeling from a deadly attack are banned in Islam and mocking him angers many Muslims.
Although images poking fun at the Prophet have repeatedly infuriated the Islamic world, Arab and Muslim leaders and clerics were quick to condemn the attack. Sunni Islamâs most prestigious center of learning Al-Azhar said âIslam denounces any violence.â
The two masked gunmen who killed 12 people at the Charlie Hebdo weekly on Wednesday claimed to be on a mission to âavengeâ its cartoons of of the prophet.
It follows years of controversy over such caricatures.
âThis is a prophet that is revered by some two billion people... Is it moral to mock him?â prominent Iraqi preacher Ahmed Al-Kubaisi told AFP, explaining the violent reaction of Muslims to cartoons of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
âFrance is the mother of all freedoms, yet no one said this (depiction) is shameful,â he said.
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said had shown disrespect toward Islam on numerous occasions.
âIs there a need for them to ridicule Prophet Muhammad knowing that they are offending Muslims?â state news agency Bernama quoted him as saying.
âWe respect their religion and they must respect our religion,â he added.
Violent protests broke out in the Muslim world after Denmarkâs Jyllands-Posten newspaper published 12 caricatures of Mohammed in 2005.
Charlie Hebdo and other European publications reproduced the cartoons the following year, including one which showed the Prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb, making them a target of Islamist fury.
The French magazineâs offices were fire-bombed in November 2011 following the publication of an edition renamed âCharia Hebdo,â (Sharia Hebdo), with a caricature of the Prophet on the front page.
Lack of respect
At the core of the problem is the âlack of respect for othersâ right to freedom of expressionâ in Arab and Muslim countries, according to Hassan Barari, professor of international relations at Qatar University.
Some people âdo not understand the Western context of free speech, where you can easily make a movie that is critical of Jesus (peace be upon him).â
Mathieu Guidere, who teaches Islamic studies at Franceâs University of Toulouse, said that the âculture of tolerance, and acceptance of different opinion is almost non-existent in the Arab and Islamic world.â
He attributed violence to a feeling harbored by âalmost every Muslim who believes that he is the defender of the Prophet and of Islam.â
Barari pointed to a history of âanimosity between the West and Muslims.â
âWe cannot deny that anti-Western feeling in the region is related to the Westâs policies. This is related to past colonialism, policy on Israel, and support to dictatorships,â he said.
Ban on depictions
The majority of Islamic scholars ban drawings of all prophets revered by Islam, and reject the depiction of the companions of Prophet Muhammad, even when it shows them in a positive light.
âWe should not open the door to people to draw the Prophet in different forms that could affect his status in the hearts of his people,â said Kubaisi, the Iraqi preacher who is based in Dubai.
There is no text from the Qurâan or the tradition of the Prophet that clearly forbids such depictions, and the ban is âout of homage and respectâ to the Prophets, he added.
The ban also applies to depictions of Prophets and companions of Prophet Muhammad in movies and television programs.
When a trailer for anti-Muslim movie âInnocence of Muslimsâ appeared on YouTube in 2012, protesters took to the streets in several countries.
Four people, including US Ambassador Chris Stevens, were killed in Libya when extremists used protests against the film to attack US interests on September 11, 2012.
In recent weeks, a number of Muslim countries banned Ridley Scottâs âExodus: Gods and Kingsâ for its depiction of Moses.
Even the 1970s epic âThe Message,â which chronicled the life of Prophet Muhammad and starred Anthony Quinn, did not impersonate the prophet.
âDepicting the Prophets of Allah would cast doubts about their status and might include lies, because actors could never match the characters of the Prophets,â said a fatwa, or edict, by the Islamic Fiqh Council in Makkah.
Why depicting Prophet Muhammad angers many Muslims
Updated 10 January 2015
Why depicting Prophet Muhammad angers many Muslims
