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Kurt Westergaard, 1935-2021

Print this article In 2005, Jyllands-Posten, “a self-described center-right newspaper in Denmark,” commissioned Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard to draw the Islamic Prophet Muhammad “as you see him.” What Westergaard produced became a symbol of a global campaign for free speech, nearly cost Westergaard his life and set off riots, attacks, and a massacre in Paris, France, that left 12 Charlie Hebdo writers dead. It also exposed a fundamental truth about how certain cultures and religions view free speech, a legacy Westergaard would no doubt be proud to boast of. The cartoons included one depicting a man in Islamic-style dress with a bomb for a turban.

Hakeem Olajuwon tells ABC13 what Ramadan means to him and his family

French girl whose accusation led to teacher s murder admits lying

A man takes a copy of the latest edition of French weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo with the title One year on, The assassin still on the run displayed at a kiosk in Nice, France, January 6, 2016. | (Photo: Reuters/Eric Gaillard) The French schoolgirl who accused her teacher of showing cartoon caricatures of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad to a class in October, which led to his murder and decapitation by an Islamic radical, has admitted she lied about the incident. The 13-year-old girl, whose complaints about her teacher’s actions led to an online campaign against him, recently admitted she was not even in the class that day. She said she did not see the controversial cartoons of Muhammad personally, but a girl in her class showed them to her, BBC reports. 

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