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Jonathan Zimmerman: Fear of Insulting Muslims No Sign of Respect

[Jonathan Zimmerman teaches history and education at New York University. He is the author of"Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools" (Harvard University Press, 2002).]

The Great Cartoon Controversy just won't go away. Last week, rioters in Pakistan set fire to a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant, two cellular phone companies and a bus terminal -- all to protest a series of Danish cartoons satirizing the Prophet Muhammad. For good measure, they also burned the Danish flag and chanted "Death to Denmark."

Yet most American newspapers still haven't published the cartoons, lest they insult Muslim sensibilities. That's exactly backward. The impulse to protect Muslims from insult reflects what I call racist multiculturalism: In the guise of defending a given group, it caricatures and demeans them.

Start with the widely accepted idea that the cartoons will offend any Muslim who sees them. How do we know that? After all, the billion or so Muslims in the world include an enormous array of nationalities, ethnicities and ideologies. Saying that the cartoons insult Muslims -- and leaving it at that -- collapses all of these distinctions.

Even more, our newspapers have often published images that appear to offend or malign other religions. Remember the 1989 imbroglio over the photograph of a crucifix submerged in urine? Shot by the American photographer Andres Serrano -- and underwritten by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts -- the photo sparked outrage around the country, from Christian churches and radio programs to the halls of Congress. But most major newspapers published the image, reasoning -- correctly -- that readers should be allowed to judge it on their own.

OK, you might respond, but Muslims are different. They take this blasphemy stuff really seriously. When they see it, they can't control themselves. So they burn, destroy and kill.

That's hogwash. And it's racist hogwash, to boot. Many Muslim clerics around the world have condemned the recent spasm of violence, which runs counter to Muhammad's own teachings about human dignity and forgiveness. Only a subset of Muslims have rioted over the cartoons. And if you hold these thugs to a lower moral standard than other people, well, you just don't think too highly of Muslims.

Remember, American newspapers have faced down thugs before. During the civil-rights era, reporters from the North received frequent threats from Southern white supremacists. Like the rioters in the Middle East today, these bigots claimed that newspapers were insulting their way of life. The newspapers should cease and desist, the racists said, or else.

"We wouldn't be having all this nigger trouble if your Northern newsmen didn't come down here and stir them up," a Mississippi businessman told the New York Times' Claude Sitton in 1964. Sitton was investigating the disappearance of three civil-rights workers, who would soon be found dead. But unless he left town, Sitton was told, he'd be killed as well.

Most of the time, news organizations stood up to these threats. Now and again, however, they capitulated. As Taylor Branch recounts in "At Canaan's Edge" (Simon & Schuster, 2006), CBS television interrupted its coverage of a 1965 civil-rights rally after white viewers complained about it. The problem? Cameras had shown Mary Travers -- of the folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary -- giving Harry Belafonte a peck on the cheek. A white woman kissing a black man! On national television! That was too offensive for sensitive white audiences -- especially in the South -- to handle. You see, white Southerners are different... .

Read entire article at San Francisco Chronicle