Speaking of Fatwas

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HagiaSophia

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Agence France Presse
Tehran, January 19:
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has labelled British author Salman Rushdie an apostate whose killing would be authorised by Islam, according to message carried by Iranian media today.

Khamenei’s reference to Rushdie was made in a message to Muslims making the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, and was part of a lengthy tirade against “Western and Zionist capitalists” and the US-led “war on terror”. “They talk about respect towards all religions, but they support such a mahdour al-damm mortad as Salman Rushdie,” the Iran’s supreme leader said.

In the Sharia, or Islamic law, ‘mortad’ is a reference to someone who has committed apostacy by leaving Islam while ‘mahdour al-damm’ is a term applying to someone whose blood may be shed with impunity. In his hajj message, the full transcript of which was carried by the state news agency IRNA, Khamenei made no further reference to Rushdie. In February 1989 Iran’s revolutionary founder and Khamenei’s predecessor, the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa, or religious edict, calling for Salman Rushdie’s execution because of alleged blasphemy and apostasy in his novel The Satanic Verses.

Under reformist President Mohammad Khatami, who was elected in 1997, Iran’s leadership has distanced itself from the order to kill Rushdie, who was born in Bombay, India, to a Muslim family. In 1998, Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi promised his then British counterpart Robin Cook that Iran would do nothing to implement the fatwa, despite a 2.8 million dollar bounty placed on Rushdie’s head by a parastate foundation in Iran.

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Many feel Rushdie mocks Islam in his novel. I think we have experienced a similar thing with the Grail novels. The difference is that Muslims realy believe their religion is part of their entire daily life, civilization and law. Many will not tolerate an apostate novelist mocking it.

One wonders if this doesn’t show more faith than Christians have.
 
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gilliam:
Many feel Rushdie mocks Islam in his novel. I think we have experienced a similar thing with the Grail novels. The difference is that Muslims realy believe their religion is part of their entire daily life, civilization and law. Many will not tolerate an apostate novelist mocking it.

One wonders if this doesn’t show more faith than Christians have.
Well I don’t know about faith…maybe “fervor”? 🙂

Actually I thought poor old Salmon was old news and pretty safe at this point; I mean a lot of other issues have come down the pike since his book. Frankly I find him an uninspired author whose book really wouldn’t have sold all that well if it weren’t for the notoriety surrounding it. I couldn’t even get through his work.
 
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