Prophet Muhammad images draw varied reactions within Muslim community
Centuries-long tradition of Islamic art included depictions of Muhammad and other prophets
Three million copies of French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdos first edition since last weeks deadly attacks went into circulation in 16 languages around the world today.
On the cover is a cartoon image of the Prophet Muhammad shedding a single tear and holding a sign with the phrase Je suis Charlie, or I am Charlie.
Above Muhammad is a line that reads, All is forgiven.
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News of CharlieHebdo'sintentions prompted warnings from some European Muslim leaderswho said the move could stoke a violent backlashfrom millions of Muslims who adhere to conservative schools of Islam, which view anyrepresentations of the Prophet as blasphemy.
But the reality is that depictions of the Prophet draw varied and complex reactions from many Muslims who do not find such images offensive and blasphemous in and of themselves, Islamic scholars say.
Long artistic tradition
The range of reactions from Muslims is wholly dependent on the type of Muslim that you happen to be speaking with, says Omid Safi, director of the Duke Islamic Studies Center at Duke University.
Safi points to the centuries-long tradition of Islamic art that depicted Muhammad and his companions as evidence of the deeply nuanced perspective most schools of Islam take on iconic representations of the Prophet.
Around1000 AD, powerful and wealthy sultans and caliphs within the Muslim centres of power, particularly in modern day Iran and Turkey, began patronizing painters and sculptors to produce images and physical icons of Muhammad.
As interpretations of the Quran and Hadith a supplementary holy text that translates as Sayings of the Prophet or prophetic traditions evolved over time, so too did the depictions of Muhammad.
By the 15th and 16th centuries, artists started going to great lengths to avoid drawing Muhammads face, often opting to depict him as veiled or simply as an amorphous shape with a halo.
Sometime in the mid-19th centuryas particularly conservative brands of Sunni Islam began to take hold in various Muslim-majority regionsartistic renditions of the Prophet began to fade from popular culture.
Images not explicitly forbidden
But the very existence of the artwork, says Safi, supports what most contemporary scholars agree upon nowhere in the Quran or Hadith are figural depictions of the Prophetexpressly forbidden.
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What is clear, however, is that early Muslims, including the Prophet himself, were deeply concerned with idol worship. When Muhammad conquered the holy city of Mecca with his early followers around AD 630, polytheismand idol worship werecommonplace.
[The Quran] castigates the worship of idols, which are understood as concrete embodiments of the polytheistic beliefs that Islam supplanted when it emerged as a purely monotheistic faith in the Arabian Peninsula, wrote Christiane Gruber, a professor of Islamic art history at the University of Michigan, in a recent Newsweek article.
According to Ebrahim Moosa, a professor of Islamic studies at the University of Notre Dame, its not physical depictions of the Prophet that some Muslims find offensive, but rather representations that desecrate his image.
There is a long, long history of satire and jokes in Muslim society, he says. But there are boundaries that the satire and the jokes cannot amount to defaming the image of the Prophet.
In many Muslim countries, such offences are punishable by death.
Gaze of satire
The sensitivity toward images of Muhammad and other prophets is almost entirely limited to cases where they are shown in a way that maliciously impugns their character.
If you put a positive depiction of Muhammad on the front page of the New York Times tomorrow, Moosa says, the reaction would be almost entirely supportive.
Another critical element of thereaction to satirical images, particularly in Europe, is that many Muslims already have a sense of disenfranchisement in their respective countries, Safi says, and they perceive the work of publications like Charlie Hebdo as forcing them further to the edge of society.
If the point of political and religious satire is to speak truth to power, then why would you turn the gaze of satire on the very community that is the most marginalized in your nation? Safi says.