Freedom of Speech: Where to Draw the Line


En route to the Philippines, Pope Francis defended free speech as a fundamental right but said there are limits to it. "If my good friend Dr. Gasparri says a curse word against my mother, he can expect a punch … You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith of others", he added. Pope Francis's comment about the limits of freedom of expression is important in that it reveals the new sacred hierarchies of late modernity. As the spiritual head of world Catholics, the Pope uses an example from civil/personal law rather than religious history. He could have said Jesus Christ or Moses instead of "my mother." But he is right to do so because this is the norm in most secular societies today.This is where one needs to pay more attention to religious sensitivities. Muslims hold their prophet dearer to their hearts than anything else, and when someone attacks or ridicules the prophet, it becomes an attack on both religious faith and personal belief. This might be difficult for some to understand but this sense of respect and protection is not limited to Prophet Muhammad alone. Muslims would equally react to attacks on other prophets such as Jesus Christ, Moses, Noah or Abraham. This is not fanaticism, as some militant secularists would claim. Rather, it is a demand for respect for one's belief.Freedom of expression, while firmly protected in modern law, has been limited on grounds of not harming others within the rule of law. In France, the denial of the Holocaust is a crime and you can be prosecuted for it even though holding the opposite view can be seen as freedom of expression. The anti-Semitism laws prohibit people from making racist and discriminatory remarks against Jews who have been vilified and persecuted for centuries in Europe.This is a proper measure to prevent hatred and incitement against Jews. Beside law, there are examples of institutions taking different measures on their own. In 2008, the Charlie Hebdo editors fired Mr. Maurice Sinet, one of its prominent cartoonists, for being anti-Semitic. Though not related to anti-Semitism yet a clearly political decision, the CNN International fired Octavia Nasr, its senior Middle East editor, in 2010 for saying in a tweet that she respected the Shiite scholar and spiritual leader Muhammad Husayn Fadlallah of Lebanon. Only a few days after the march in Paris, the French authorities opened a criminal investigation against the French comedian Dieudonné M'bala M'bala for posting a comment on his Facebook page and then arrested him on charges of defending terrorism. In the past, Dieudonné's shows have been cancelled in France and the U.K. for being anti-Semitic and racist. Since the Jan. 7 attack, France reportedly opened more than 50 criminal cases for hate speech, anti-Semitism and glorifying terrorism. Even in France, the land of Liberte, there are limits to freedom of expression.A number of decisions taken by the European Court of Human Rights including the 1967 Handyside case establishes freedom of speech as a fundamental right but also limits it on the basis of the "harm principle," i.e., not harming others physically and psychologically.All these examples point to the limits of freedom of expression and they are widely applied in various political and legal contexts. The trouble is that the harm principle is usually forsaken when it comes to Muslim minority communities. Ridiculing their sacred values and figures in the name of free speech goes against the principle of reason, rule of law and respect for others.Furthermore, anti-Muslim hate speech and incitement is not limited to Muslim minorities living in Europe and the U.S. They are equally harmful and offensive to the 1.6 billion Muslims around the world.In its essence and impact, anti-Muslim hate speech is no different to anti-Semitism. But there is no legal framework to protect Muslims from libel, slander and incitement to violence in the same way that the anti-Semitism laws protect Jews. No matter how liberal and concerned they are, most European politicians and bureaucrats are against introducing a bill similar to anti-Semitism to protect Muslim minority communities.Francois Hollande, the president of France, is the most notable exception to this. In a speech at the Arab World Institute in Paris on Jan. 15, President Hollande hinted at something that can have truly significant consequences for the legal protection of Muslim minorities in Europe: "It is Muslims who are the first victims of fanaticism, fundamentalism and intolerance," Mr. Hollande said. Underlying that "French Muslims have the same rights as all other French people," he added that "we have the obligation to protect them. The law must be firmly enforced in places of worship such as churches, mosques, and synagogues." Then he made this important remark: "Anti-Muslim acts, like anti-Semitism, should not only be denounced, but severely punished." It remains to be seen what impact President Hollandetarget="_blank"'>