A caricature that many Muslims considered blasphemous prompted a debate over free speech and a massacre at the offices of a Paris magazine. By Sam Roberts The police identified the suspect in Saturday ...
Did you know that I had a hand in the Danish cartoons of Muhammad? No? Well, neither did I, until I found this out in early February on a conspiracist Web site. To clear the record, I’ll start with ...
On Sept. 30, the paper published 12 cartoons, including my own, that took Islam and Muhammad as their subject. The "Danish cartoon affair" which ensued turned out to be perhaps the most important free ...
Most of us have heard about the Danish cartoon issue, but for those who have not, a Danish newspaper printed some cartoons considered offensive to Islam, including a caricature of the prophet Muhammad ...
With the furor about the Danish cartoons raging unabated, overshadowed only by the growing sectarian violence in Iraq, it behooves us to take a closer look at what has happened. As always, there is ...
After the disbelief at the absurdity of the situation wears off, the Danish cartoon riots have provided some excellent material for making broader points about civilization and the world for any group ...
COPENHAGEN, Denmark — It was a provocative exercise: asking cartoonists to draw pictures of the Prophet Muhammad that were published in one of Denmark’s largest papers. But apparently no one at the ...