[Vision2020] Iran Goes Playground

J Ford privatejf32 at hotmail.com
Tue Feb 7 10:51:16 PST 2006


The following seems so much like a kid saying "nanner, nanner...you did it 
to me, now I'm gonna do it to you."  Doesn't that just take the wind out of 
things a bit when adults act more like playground bullies than kids do?

Iran daily holds contest for Holocaust cartoons

24 minutes ago

Iran's best-selling newspaper has launched a competition to find the best 
cartoon about the Holocaust in retaliation for the publication in many 
European countries of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad.

The Brussels-based Conference of European Rabbis (CER) denounced the idea 
and urged the Muslim world to do likewise.

The Anti-Defamation League, which fights anti-Semitism, described the 
competition as "deliberately inflammatory."

The Iranian daily Hamshahri said the contest was designed to test the 
boundaries of free speech -- the reason given by many European newspapers 
for publishing the cartoons of the Prophet.

"Does Western free speech allow working on issues like America and Israel's 
crimes or an incident like the Holocaust or is this freedom of speech only 
good for insulting the holy values of divine religions?" the paper asked.

Davoud Kazemi, who is in charge of the contest, told Reuters that each of 
the 12 winners would have their cartoons published and receive two gold 
coins (worth about $140 each) as a prize.

In Paris, CER President Joseph Sitruk, who is also Chief Rabbi of France, 
said: "The Iranian regime has plummeted to new depths if it regards the 
deaths of six million Jews as a matter for humor or to score cheap political 
points.

"Sadly, we are not surprised by this action," he said, recalling Iranian 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's calls last year for Israel to be "wiped off 
the map" and his dismissal of the Holocaust as a myth.

In a statement issued by the CER, which represents chief rabbis from over 40 
European countries, Sitruk said the Iranian government menaced Jews and the 
whole international community.

Sitruk noted that European religious leaders had condemned the publication 
of images likely to offend Muslim feelings.

"This is a test for the Muslim world to react immediately to condemn their 
own co-religionists in Iran for such obscene behavior as we condemned those 
who sought to insult them," he said.

Iranian protesters hurled petrol bombs and stones at the Danish Embassy in 
Tehran for a second successive day on Tuesday and Tehran announced it had 
cut all trade ties with Denmark.

A Danish newspaper published the cartoons in September, and newspapers in 
Norway and a dozen other countries reprinted them last month, citing the 
need to defend freedom of speech.

Arieh O'Sullivan, spokesman for the Anti-Defamation League's Israel office, 
said it was committed to free speech and a free press but that did not mean 
a license to foster hatred.

"What bothers us this incident has been used by the Arab world basically as 
an excuse to stick it to the Jews," he said.

"Iran is doing a dare to see how free the press is in Europe. This is 
deliberately inflammatory," O'Sullivan said, accusing newspapers in the Arab 
and Muslim world of frequently running cartoons of Jews that recalled Nazi 
propaganda.

In Belgium, a radical Muslim group based in Antwerp began publishing 
cartoons on its Web site which it also said were intended to challenge 
European taboos and highlight inconsistency in the European approach to 
freedom of speech.

They included a cartoon of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler in bed with Anne 
Frank, a Jewish girl whose wartime diary written in hiding in Amsterdam is a 
worldwide best-seller, and another that questioned whether 6 million Jews 
died in the Holocaust.

"If it is the time to break taboos and cross all the red lines, we certainly 
do not want to stay behind," the Arab European League said on its Web site 
(www.arabeuropean.org).

Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt accused the group of fuelling riots 
in Antwerp in November, 2002. The group's leader, Dyab Abou Jahjah, was 
briefly arrested at the time. He ran unsuccessfully for parliament in 2003.

(Additional reporting by Tom Heneghan in Paris, Allyn Fisher-Ilan in 
Jerusalem and Paul Taylor in Brussels)

J  :]

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