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Mahathir
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KUALA
LUMPUR, October 5 (IslamOnline & News agencies) - Malaysian Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad Saturday, October 5, denounced conservative
U.S. Baptist Minister, Reverend Jerry Falwell who called Prophet
Mohammad (peace and blessings be upon him) "a terrorist."
"They
don't understand anything, they don't understand Islam," the Prime
Minister was quoted as saying by the official Bernama news agency.
Mahathir,
76, said the pastor had no right to make such a statement.
Asked
if such a statement from a Reverend was an indication that the Christian
community was ignorant of Islam, the premier said only an ignorant
person would make such a remark.
"I'm
not going to accuse all Christians, only one person made such a
statement," he said.
Mahathir
urged Muslims not take the matter too seriously.
Muslims
make up 60 percent of Malaysia's 23 million people, Christians make up
nine percent, Buddhists 19 percent and Hindus six percent.
Falwell
made his remarks in an interview to be broadcast Sunday, October 6, on
the CBS television network's "60 Minutes" program.
Falwell,
a leader of the U.S. Evangelical Christian right, is no stranger to
controversy or inflammatory remarks.
In
the interview, Falwell also affirms the Christian Rights steadfast
support for the state of Israel and hints that right-wing religious
groups are influencing the U.S. government policy toward Israel.
Right-wing
Christians believe the turmoil in the Middle East is a harbinger of the
second coming of Christ, according to CBS News.
"I think Muhammad was a terrorist. I read enough by both Muslims
and non-Muslims, [to decide] that he was a violent man, a man of
war," Falwell says in the interview, according to an advance
transcript released by CBS.
CBS released a partial transcript of the interview Thursday, October 3.
Falwell's comments occur in a segment about American conservative
Christians' political support for Israel.
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"In
my opinion, Jesus set the example for love, as did Moses, and I think
Muhammad set an opposite example."
Falwell was widely criticized last year for saying pagans, abortionists,
feminists, gays and civil liberties groups secularized the United States
and helped the September 11th attacks happen.
He has also previously labeled Muhammad a pedophile possessed by the
devil.
An
angry and immediate response to Falwell's comments came from American
Muslim organizations.
Faiz
Rehman, communications director of the American Muslim Council, a
political advocacy group in Washington, accused Falwell of "verbal
terrorism."
"Mr.
Falwell is not following Jesus's example. He is preaching hatred; he is
not preaching peace," Rehman said to the Washington Post.
"Anybody
is free to be a bigot if they want to. What concerns us the most is the
complete failure of mainstream religious and political leaders to
repudiate this kind of anti-Muslim hate speech," said Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) spokesman Ibrahim Hooper.
"On the issue of bigotry, silence equals consent," Hooper
said.

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