No,
because no two groups of people will agree on who gets to set
the limits and what those limits are.
For
example, you do not have to draw Muhammad to spark
demonstrations. The cartoon that most enraged my Muslim readers
did not have a depiction of Muhammad in it at all.
I
drew the cartoon two years ago after over a hundred people were
killed in riots against a Miss World Contest in Africa, which
local Muslims thought was offensive to women. My cartoon pointed
out that radical Muslims who prevented women from voting, kept
women from school and stoned women to death were also rather
offensive to women.
After
the cartoon was published, some of my Muslim readers complained
in person to my editor, some wrote angry letters which we
published, and some picketed outside our building. In a
conversation with one woman who defended wearing the headscarf,
I said what I believe: I had no problem with anyone wearing a
headscarf or any other religious outfit. But, I added, "You
wouldn’t force other women to wear the headscarf, would
you?"
After
a pause she replied, "Well, if it was for her own
good."
This
is why I go to the drawing board every day. I am drawing to help
prevent a world where someone else decides what I must wear for
my own good. Others would say that there should be limits on my
speech and my dress.
While
I am willing to be called anti-Muslim to express my views, I am
also willing to be called anti-Catholic, anti-Jewish and
anti-American. I have been called all three things and worse. I
do not get up in the morning thinking, "How can I insult
Muhammad, Jesus or Moses, today?" Usually, I do not deal
with religions at all unless you consider George W. Bush’s
devout faith war a religion.
However,
if a religious group comes to my government and asks for my tax
dollars or wants to pass laws that cover me, that religion and
its adherents enter into the political process and must — in a
democracy — be treated with the same consideration as any
politician or political group. Likewise, if someone kills an
abortion doctor in the name of Jesus or uses planes to kill
thousands in the name of Muhammad, that someone is open to be
drawn with as much consideration as I would draw any murderer.
Cartoonists
must be free to draw about religion because it is often fanatics
acting in the name of religions who try to hijack our freedoms.
They are the ones who want to set the "limits." One of
the French newspaper editors who
ran
the Danish cartoons noted that if you let every religious group
have control over what you print, there would be nothing left to
put in the paper.
Just
because a cartoonist draws one cartoon critical of some Islamic
terrorist, it does not mean that that cartoonist is against
Islam. Right after 9/11, for example, I did a cartoon that made
fun of how ignorant we Americans are of everything Islamic. We
have the freedom to criticize ourselves and we use it.
Many
American and European cartoonists have drawn cartoons bitterly
against the war in Iraq even when it was not a popular position
to take.
Unfortunately,
quite a few of the world’s cartoonists who do not have that
freedom are cartoonists in the Arab world whose governments
forbid them from drawing about their own leaders. One cartoonist
I know who lives in exile draws cartoons longing for peace and
reconciliation but cannot live in his own country because he
sometimes is critical of that country’s clerical leaders.
Cartoonists
everywhere have a genetic flaw. We may love our countries but we
sit a little outside and see the imperfections. That is where we
find humor.
For
the US press, this current controversy was not about American
cartoonists, but whether to run the Danish cartoons. Most
papers, including some of the "alternative papers,"
which regularly ridicule religions, chose not to run them.
Consequently, most Americans never had a chance to see whether
the cartoons really were offensive. Instead, all Americans saw
were the angry faces of what looked like irrational Muslims
rioting. If editors had let their readers see the images,
readers might have understood why Muslims were insulted.
| While
I did not need to ridicule Muhammad, I strongly
felt that it was important as a cartoonist in the free
world to retain the right to draw him. |
The
biggest newspaper in Philadelphia discreetly ran one of the
cartoons with an explanation that it was not endorsing the
cartoon, but rather it was trying to inform its readers. Some
local Muslims mounted two loud, peacefully protested and wrote
articles explaining their views.
My
own newspaper did not run the Danish cartoons. While I did not
need to ridicule Muhammad, I strongly felt that it was important
as a cartoonist in the free world to retain the right to draw
him. After some bad starts, I drew a cartoon of the Buddha,
Jesus, a rabbi, Muhammad, the Christian God from Michael
Angelo’s Sistine Chapel, and Vishnu all happily laughing as
they read "The Big Fat Book of Obnoxious Religious
Cartoons."
The
cartoon ran in our paper. One reader sent one mild letter of
complaint. I received many supportive letters and requests for
copies of the cartoon.
The
reaction confirmed what I believe. It is not whether you draw
holy figures in a cartoon, but rather it is how you draw
them. If the Danish cartoonists had drawn respectable looking
cartoons of Muhammad, this controversy would never have
happened. As it was, the cartoons were political statements and
it was the politics, not the image that fueled the protests.
The
Danish cartoons have led to some positive results. I would not
be exchanging views on an Islamic website had no one published
those cartoons. I have been on three panels with Muslims in
Philadelphia and Washington D.C. to discuss the issue; people I
would never have met and who never would have met me. At all
three, Americans on both sides of the issue have packed the
rooms to peacefully share their opinions. And, one of the people
who protested my cartoon about Muslim women two years ago has
invited me to join a class he is teaching on Islam. I plan to
attend and listen to him speak freely.
**