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The cartoons have sparked Muslim furor worldwide.
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By
Hany Salah, IOL Correspondent
CAIRO,
February 6, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) – Romanian Muslims are fighting
the Danish cartoons that mocked Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) in their own
way, launching a campaign to get the Romanians acquainted with the
merits of the prophet of Islam and his noble characteristics.
"Romanian
Muslims will distribute nationwide thousands of pamphlets and handouts
among the Romanians on the life of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) under the
title ‘Muhammad….A Role Model for the Modern World," Kareem
Anjin, the representative of the International Tiba Charity in
Constanta, southeastern Romania, told IslamOnline.net on Monday,
February 6, over the phone.
"This
is an opportune moment to correct distorted facts about our much
stereotyped religion, which has taken center stage in Romanian media
after the cartoon crisis," he said.
Twelve
cartoons, first published last September by Denmark's mass-circulation
Jyllands-Posten and then reprinted by several European dailies,
have caused an uproar in the Muslim world.
Muslims
protesting the cartoons set fire to the Danish consulate in Beirut on
Sunday and Syrian protesters did the same with the Danish and
Norwegian embassies in Damascus a day earlier.
Muslim
scholars, organizations and leaders were united Sunday in condemning
the violent attacks against the embassies.
Mixed
Blessing
Anjin
said that the cartoon standoff has a mixed blessing, with the media
and newspapers becoming a podium for defending Muslims and their
sanctities.
"The
other day channel Antana 3 interviewed Muslim activist Abu Al-Ala Al-Gheithy,
who spoke for almost one hour about Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)," he
said.
"Rilititi
TV channel received a torrent of phone calls from Romanians, who
rejected the publication of these blasphemous cartoons under the
excuse of free speech," he added.
The
Muslim activist said most of the callers dismissed the publication as
an "imprudent act" and noted that freedom of expression
should not hurt the feelings of others.
A
channel’s online poll further showed that 71 percent of the
respondents rejected using free speech as a pretext to insult prophets
or religions.
The
National Council for Combating Racism has urged Romanian media not to
reprint the offensive drawings after a Romanian Web site reproduced
them.
There
are some 70,000 Muslims in Romania, mostly hailing from Turkey and
Albania.