Mohammed Image Archive
The Jyllands-Posten Cartoons
The Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten created the furor over depictions of
Mohammed by publishing a series of 12 drawings after a local author said he was
unable to find any artist willing to depict Mohammed for his upcoming
illustrated book. The publication of the images in Jyllands-Posten has
been condemned around the Islamic world, and has led to the burning of embassies
and a boycott of Denmark by Muslim nations.
Here are the Jyllands-Posten drawings, for the record:
Higher-resolution jpegs of each individual cartoon can be found
here (scroll
down the page).
This is what the original Jyllands-Posten page looked like. Notice that
there were only 12 cartoons.
(Hat tip: Joanna.)
The Fake Cartoons
Yet when a delegation of Danish imams went to the Middle East to
"discuss" the issue of the cartoons with senior officials and prominent Islamic
scholars, the imams openly distributed a booklet that showed many more
images -- not only the original 12 cartoons (and, oddly, some other unrelated
satirical images clipped from newspapers), but three fraudulent anti-Mohammed
depictions that were much more offensive than the ones published in Denmark. It
is now thought that
these three bonus images are what ignited the outrage in the Muslim world.
The newspaper Ekstra Bladet
obtained a copy of the booklet and presented the three offensive images on
its Web site (though not in an easy-to-find place). (This
Web site also has all 43 pages of the booklet available for download.
Wikipedia currently has a page that not only
shows each page, but has a translation of the Danish and Arabic text in the
booklet as well.) The fake images all look like low-quality photocopies.
Here they are:
(Hat tip: Gerry, Martin H., and rfs.)
Mohammed with a pig snout, singing into a microphone.
Neander News discovered that this fraudulent image of "Mohammed" was actually
just a bad photocopy of an AP news photo from last year showing
French comedian
Jacques Barrot competing in a pig-squealing contest while wearing a rubber
pig nose. The Danish imams passed it off as a blasphemous image of Mohammed for
the purpose of stirring up resentment and anger.
(Hat tip: Archive readers.)
The caption says in Arabic, "This is why Muslims pray."
(Hat tip: Daniel and Ken.)
A
sketch of Mohammed as a demonic pedophile.
While people across the Middle East are rioting over the publication of the 12
cartoons in European papers, no one seems to have minded that the
cartoons were printed last fall in an Egyptian paper as well.
So far, 143
newspapers around the world have published the Danish cartoons. You can see
a full list of them
at the
Danish news site eJour. (Hat tip: foreign devil.)
The entire controversy started when Danish author Kåre Bluitgen complained that
he could not find an artist brave enought to illustrate his upcoming book about
Mohammed. The newspaper Jyllands-Posten issued a call for submissions
from any artists willing to take up the challenge. In the ensuing brouhaha, the
original book was almost forgotten; it has now been released, and does feature
page after page of Mohammed depictions.
This site features scans of several of the pages (hat tip: Rune,
Kim and Mikkel.). This image above, taken from the book (titled
Koranen og profeten Muhammeds liv, or The Koran and the life of the
prophet Mohammed in English), apparently shows Mohammed with his child-bride
Aisha.
This Danish blog also has some information about the release of the book.
Click here to
return to the main Mohammed Image Archive page
Other Archive Sections:
Islamic Depictions of Mohammed in Full
Islamic Depictions of Mohammed with Face Hidden
European Medieval and Renaissance Images
Miscellaneous Mohammed Images
Book
Illustrations
Dante's Inferno
French
Book Covers
Satirical Modern Cartoons
The Jyllands-Posten Cartoons
Recent
Responses to the Controversy
Links
(Click here to return to the main
nordish page.)