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Muslims Worldwide Condemn France Attack


American Satirists Speak Out Against Terror Shooting at French Publication
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Related video by Arash Arabasadi: After gunmen killed 12 at a Paris magazine for publishing cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, many users changed their social media photos to the name of the magazine in a show of solidarity. In the U.S., seemingly anyone with a satiric pen or microphone condemned the attack.

This week's deadly attack on the satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo is drawing condemnation from Muslims around the world. But, many also are upset at what they see as the paper's offensive cartoons.

Mainstream Islamic leaders and organizations rushed to condemn the Wednesday shooting as a horrific act of terror that goes against the principles of Islam.

Al-Azhar, one of the most respected institutions of Sunni Islamic learning, called the attack "criminal" and "an offense committed against Muslim sentiments."

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation also released a statement saying such acts of terror "only represent the criminal perpetrators," and not Islam as a whole.

Condemnations also poured in from the leaders of Muslim-majority nations, such as Syria, Iraq, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

Even Iran's foreign ministry denounced the attack. But it criticized what it said are "abuses of freedom of speech" and "character assassination of religious figures." That response is in reference to the French magazine's often mocking cartoon portrayal of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad, among other religious figures.

Ahmed Rehab, executive director of the Chicago chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, says he was not necessarily "emotionally offended" by the cartoons, but he did find them to be "in poor taste."

"I think as a society, we ought not champion offending people's sacred spaces and symbols in the name of freedom of speech, but when it happens, we ought not excuse penalizing such people with death or violence," said Rehab.

Other Muslims are offended at the notion that they should have to respond at all to acts of religious extremists they are not associated with.

Abdullah Al Athba, a Qatari journalist, urged that Muslims via Twitter "don't apologize for a crime you didn't commit."

Some extremists used Twitter to broadcast a more radical approach. On Twitter, the Arabic hashtags #revengefortheprophet and #parisburns were trending.

On an Iraqi-based radio station run by the Islamic State group, a statement called the gunmen "heroes" who avenged the Prophet Muhammad.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the shooting. It came amid a series of recent attacks by supporters or members of the Islamic State.

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