Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Egyptian Islamists attempt to draw a veil over 'salacious' masterpiece

Copies of 1001 Nights on display in a Cairo store

Copies of 1001 Nights on display in a Cairo store

Robert Fisk reports on the hardline law group that wants to censor passages from 'One Thousand and One Nights':

How come the Muslim world – at its moments of greatest crisis – will invariably manage to deflect its energies into the most preposterous cultural, historical or religious questions?

Egyptian Islamists have said they want to censor "salacious" passages from the One Thousand and One Nights, one of the Muslim world's priceless literary works. This is the same country whose prelates once ordered a university professor to divorce his wife because he had dared to suggest a reinterpretation of the Koran.

Ayman Abdel Hakeem, a member of the "Islamist Lawyers without Shackles" group, wants to censor the tales told in the Arabian Nights because the epic "contains profanities which cannot be acceptable in Egyptian society." The very idea of an insatiable woman offends him. "We understand that this kind of literature is acceptable in the West, but here we have a different culture" he is reported as saying.

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2 comments:

  1. Totally nuts, just like the loons in the US who whine about Huckleberry Finn or Harry Potter.

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