A new fatwa against writer Taslima Nasrin!
Published on March 20, 2007
Dear Mukto-Mona forum-goers:Many Bangalee Internet-goers who pretend to be the champion for the cause of free expression of thoughts and women lib causes blames many of us, the secularists, to be an ardent supporter of the intrepid female writer from Bangladesh. What many of us had stated in the past visa-vis Taslima Nasreen is that we support her rights to freely express her thoughts. I am doing the same thing again.A handful of Islamic clerics who think Ms. Nasreen is a loose canon and whose writings blemish Islam have the opinion that her writings are pernicious; therefore, she should be beheaded. Please read the recent AFP dispatch to confirm the veracity of the fact that a small section of virulent Islamists hold such obscurantist views. This testament from me hardly makes me a champion of Ms. Nasreen's views. Fatwa should be banned and banned right now. Many of the Islamic practices including Fatwa Giving are anachronistic and needs to be weeded out if Muslim societies all around the world would like to embrace modernity and make headway into the future for the betterment of the so called Ummah.Sincerely,A.H. Jaffor Ullah---------------------------------Indian Muslim group calls for beheading of writer Taslima NasreenSat Mar 17, 4:47 AM ET
LUCKNOW (AFP) - An Indian Muslim group has offered a 500,000 rupee (11,319 dollar) bounty for the beheading of controversial Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen.The president of the All India Ibtehad Council, Taqi Raza Khan, said on Friday he had declared the reward for anyone who carried out the "quatal" or "extermination" of the "notorious woman.""Taslima has put Muslims to shame in her writing. She should be killed and beheaded and anyone who does this will get a reward from the council," he said in a statement received in Lucknow, capital of northern Uttar Pradesh state.The council, based in the Uttar Pradesh town of Bareilly, is a splinter group of the influential All India Muslim Personal Law Board.Khan said the only way the bounty would be lifted was if Nasreen "apologises, burns her books and leaves."The bounty was not a fatwa as Khan, while a cleric, is not senior enough to issue Islamic decrees.But it drew swift condemnation from one of south Asia's most powerful Muslim seminaries.The clergy of the Sunni seminary Dar-ul Uloom in Deoband in Uttar Pradesh, a state with a large Muslim population, said the call to behead Nasreen was "un-Islamic" and that clergy should not issue such "fatwas.""Unnecessary edicts increase friction in society and people of other religions start treating Islam as a barbaric religion," Mufti Arif, who sits on the board of the fatwa committee of Dar-ul Uloom, told AFP by telephone.At the same time Arif backed Khan's call for 45-year-old Nasreen's expulsion from India, where she is seeking permanent residence or citizenship.Nasreen has incensed conservative Muslims for writing a novel "Lajja" or "Shame" depicting the life of a Hindu family facing the ire of Muslims in Bangladesh. The book is banned in Muslim-majority Bangladesh.The author was forced to flee her homeland in 1994 after radical Muslims decried her writings as blasphemous and demanded her execution.There was no immediate comment available from Nasreen, who is also a doctor, who has lived in self-exile in Europe and the United States but who has lately been living in India.
_____
Dr. A.H. Jaffor Ullah, a researcher and columnist, writes from New Orleans
Responses:
Sukhamaya Bain
Mar 18, 2007
5:11 pmMehul Kamdar
Mar 18, 2007
5:32 pmAkbar Hussain
Mar 19, 2007
7:43 pmChowdhury, Mar 18, 2007
5:18 pm