We all know the cartoons that appear in the everydays newspaper...we all look at them, we usually smile, but sometimes things can go in the wrong way...
On February 5, 2006, at the height of the tension following the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten's publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, Muslim protesters torched Denmark's embassies in Beirut and Damascus. While many in the West looked on with bewilderment, protests spread across the Muslim world, and stores in Muslim areas removed Danish products from their shelves. Even as the cartoon crisis captured headlines around the world, most people outside Denmark remain unfamiliar with the forces propelling it. Like the Salman Rushdie affair before it and the furor over Pope Benedict XVI's remarks at Regensburg University after it, the cartoon controversy had less to do with genuine outrage over the depiction of Islam's prophet and more to do with the ambitions, first, of a small group of radical imams and, later, of jousting Middle Eastern powers. Now that the dust has settled, what is the legacy of the crisis, not only for Denmark but also for the Western world? But this post souldn't be about that, it should be about the power that one picture, related to some media has...
Most of the people already forgot what happened after the 'crysis' with media using picture of Mohamed as a way to show current political situation, but from time to time, we can still find someone who makes fun about the events that followed - but in a ironic whay.
That reminds me - what can we show with a simple cartoon? Let's us look.
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