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A file photo of Muslims protesting
the offensive cartoons published last year in a Danish newspaper.
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CAIRO — Denouncing a
Danish video lampooning prophet Muhammad
(peace and blessings b upon him) and renewing
a call for an all-out boycott of Denmark,
prominent Muslim scholars warned Monday,
October 9, that repeated anti-Islam insults
are aimed at distracting Muslims from
developing their countries.
"One of the main goals
of this ferocious campaign against Islam and
its sanctities is to distract Muslims from
achieving the Islamic civilizational project
to rid the Muslim nation of its subordination
to the West," the International Union for
Muslim Scholars said in a statement, a copy of
which was sent to IslamOnline.net.
The Dublin-based IUMS
lashed out at a new video aired by Denmark's
TV2 channel, showing members of the
extreme-right Danish People's Party portraying
Prophet Muhammad as a beer-drinking camel and
a drunken terrorist attacking Copenhagen.
It said the footage and the
12 anti-Prophet caricatures published last
year by Denmark's mass-circulation daily Jyllands
Posten prove a drudge against Islam and
Muslims.
Expecting more anti-Islam
insults, the Muslim scholars said the best way
to respond is to "pay no heed at all to
the ignorant."
They cited a verse from the
Qur'an that reads: "And when they hear
vanity they withdraw from it and say: Unto us
our works and unto you your works. Peace be
unto you! We desire not the ignorant."
(Al-Qassas — 55)
Leaders of the Muslim
minority in Denmark, around three percent of
the population, said Saturday they will not be
provoked by such a "childish
manner," but will take an astute action
against the insult by the anti-immigrant
party.
Pope Benedict XVI triggered
an international controversy last month by
linking Islam with violence by quoting a
Byzantine emperor at a lecture in his native
Germany.
Mixed Blessing
The Union said such
insults, which neither hurt the Prophet nor
undermine the love Muslims have for him, are a
mixed blessing as they drive non-Muslims to
know what Islam is all about.
Following the Danish
cartoon crisis, many Muslim minorities around
the world championed local know-prophet
campaigns introducing Prophet Muhammad and
Islam to their non-Muslim countrymen.
The IUMS, nonetheless,
renewed a call to boycott Denmark,
economically and culturally, building on the
successful economic boycott to the
Scandinavian country in the wake of the
cartoons controversy.
It also urged Muslim
political parties and movements worldwide to
boycott the DPP and called on Danish Muslims,
in particular, to shun and vote down the party
in any parliamentary or municipal elections.
Danish Prime Minister
Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Sunday, October 8,
condemned the new offensive footage.
The IUMS urged Muslim
governments anew to live up to their
responsibilities and take firm political
stances against any insult to the Prophet or
Islam.
"They should not give
up raising the issue of insulting religions at
the UN General Assembly and other
international organizations in order to have
an international resolution prohibiting and
criminalizing blasphemy."
The IUMS further called for
striking agreements with different countries,
banning blasphemy reciprocally.
After the carton crisis,
the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC)
and the Arab League, the Muslim world's two
main political bodies, sought a UN resolution,
backed by possible sanctions, to protect
religions.