A Muslim activist who had received permission to burn a Torah and a Bible outside the Israeli embassy in Sweden on Saturday appeared to back off from his plan, saying he only wanted to draw attention to the recent burning of the Quran in the country.The Swedish police had given Ahmad Alush the OK after he decided this was all part of his protest against the burning of a Quran outside a Stockholm mosque last month, by an Iraqi Christian immigrant. The police at the time permitted burning the Quran as an example of free speech after a court overturned a ban on Quran burning.
The burning of the Quran, or any other holy text, is an offensive and disrespectful act and a clear provocation. Expressions of racism, xenophobia and related intolerance have no place in Sweden or in Europe
while at the same time pointing out that Sweden has
constitutionally protected right to freedom of assembly, expression and demonstration.Luckily, Alush backed out and claimed he never intended to burn the Torah and was just trying to make a point about the limits of free speech.
Some background:
A Jewish apostate, Nicholas Donin, told the Pope that the Talmud contained insults to the Christian religion. In France, on the order of the Pope, many volumes of the Talmud were seized. In 1240, King Louis IX ( later St. Louis) ordered the Talmud put on trial. Jewish representatives were permitted only to defend themselves, not to advance positive proofs for their position. Not surprisingly, the Talmud was declared guilty, and in 1242 24 wagonloads of Talmudic volumes were publicly burned in ParisJust as Alush got his idea from a previous burning of the Quran, in 1290 France there was also a precedent that inspired Church to burn Jewish books:
Sadly, Jewish infighting regarding Rambam's works also played a major role in this tragic event. Some overzealous Jews denounced the Rambam's writings to the Church, and once the Church determined that his books should be burned, it was only a small step until all Jewish books were consigned to the flames.Of course, history shows that the world does not need Jewish in-fighting in order to get ideas.
This week a German regional court ruled that the 2014 firebombing of a synagogue in Wuppertal, a region just east of Düsseldorf, was an act of criminal arson, but not anti-Semitic. Instead, the court found it was a protest against Israel, even though the synagogue was obviously not in Israel and those who worship there are Jews, not Israelis.
The decision upheld that of a lower court, which stated the perpetrators, a trio of Palestinian-born German residents, wanted to “call attention to the Gaza conflict” when they prepared and then lobbed Molotov cocktails at the synagogue one July night in 2014. No one was injured, but the attack caused €800 in damages. The men were ultimately given suspended sentences. [emphasis added]
On every Saturday morning since September 2003, a group of protesters has gathered in front of the Beth Israel Synagogue in Ann Arbor during Shabbat morning services with signs reading "Jewish Power Corrupts,” “Resist Jewish Power,” “End the Palestinian Holocaust,” “Stop Funding Israel,” and “Fake News: Israel Is A Democracy.”
But US District Judge Victoria Roberts was unimpressed and ruled that the protests were protected by the First Amendment.
Peaceful protest speech such as this – on sidewalks and streets – is entitled to the highest level of constitutional protection, even if it disturbs, is offensive, and causes emotional distress.
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