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[PICTURE] Does this offend you?

MenInG

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Not sure if this type of exhibit will result in an understanding or complete reaction to Islam!

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https://www.mail.com/int/news/europ...-city-scarred-terror.html#.1272-stage-hero1-9

But the "Islam. It's Also Our History" exhibition at the city-owned Vanderborght Building finally managed to open last week and is telling its story of a long Islamic presence on European soil that has shaped Western culture in areas ranging from medicine, philosophy and architecture to diplomacy, language and food.

"We want to make clear to Europeans that Islam is part of European civilization and that it isn't a recent import but has roots going back 13 centuries," said Isabelle Benoit, a historian with Tempora, the organization that designed the exhibition.

Funded by the European Union and Belgian authorities, the show was conceived many years before the deadly Paris attacks of 2015 were carried out by a Brussels-based extremist cell and the March 2016 attacks that killed 32 people in Brussels itself.

It tries to build bridges in an era of distrust and fear by showing the rich civilization that Muslims first brought to Europe in the Medieval period, when they ruled in the Iberian Peninsula, today's Spain and Portugal, for eight centuries. There they produced a rich civilization and oversaw a long era in which Muslims, Jews and Christians lived in peaceful co-existence, albeit with Jews and Christians as second citizens.

The golden era is recalled today in Islamic architectural gems — castles and mosques-turned-cathedrals — that still dot Granada, Seville and other parts of Spain, Portugal and even Sicily. Jean-Francois Ravagnan, a visitor from Liege, Belgium, said he found the exhibition a "chance to set the record straight."

"We no longer take the time to look at our common history. We're no longer interested in the other, in their origins, in their traditions," he said. The show also addresses difficult issues, including violent extremism and the problems that Belgium and other Western European countries have faced in past decades in integrating large Muslim communities.

While stressing that integration is often a success, the exhibition puts some blame on both native populations and Muslim migrants for the times integration fails, and says building bridges requires accommodation on both sides. To Muslim newcomers there is a pointed message delivered in a short video: certain values are "non-negotiable" in Europe, including democracy, individual rights, secularism and gender equality.

A variety of traditional objects and installations are used to tell the story of three major periods of Muslim presence on Europe's soil: the Arab conquest of Spain in the Middle Ages; Ottoman rule over southeastern Europe starting in the 14th century; and the Colonial era, which opened the way for Muslims from the Middle East and Africa to begin settling in Europe in the 20th century.

The unsettled problems of today, including the large-scale migration over the past few years and Islamic violence, are dealt with primarily with artistic installations, some of them provocative. One installation — "End of Dreams" by Danish artist Nikolaj Bendix Skyum Larsen — is an ode to those who have died trying to reach Europe in dangerous voyages across the Mediterranean Sea. Visitors find themselves in a dark room surrounded on all four sides by large videos of the sea bottom, with bundles on the floor evoking the small bodies of children who have drowned at sea.

But one installation in particular provoked some Muslim schoolteachers from Belgium on a recent visit — a Louis Vuitton vanity case holding a mock bomb, creation of U.S. artist Gregory Green. Nejia Adouiri, a 41-year-old primary school teacher, said she found it "very confrontational" that the show "wanted to make a link between Islam and what has been happening recently worldwide." She was also upset that it was among the last objects in the show — giving it the power to linger in visitors' minds.


In response to the criticism, organizers told The Associated Press that they intended to move the installation to a different place in the exhibition hall to give it less psychological weight, and would also probably add some textual context. But they said they wouldn't remove it entirely.

Eli Barnavi, a historian from Tel Aviv University and president of the scientific committee that developed the exhibition, said that while jihadi extremism is an aberration in the long history of Islam, it's a reality of the current age that must be dealt with too.

He said society must grapple even with these difficult issues, and that while organizers and city officials were hesitant to open the exhibition soon after the 2016 attacks, the time was finally right.

"Slowly but surely everybody started to understand that that's the moment to do it," Barnavi said. "That precisely because of the strife and the violence and terrorism it's important to have some kind of pedagogical approach, some kind of dialogue; and the exhibition is meant to do precisely that, to show that Muslims are very much part of Europe, that they belong here, that it's a very old presence on European soil, that they had an important influence and impact on this civilization."

The exhibition opened on Sept. 15 and runs through Jan. 21 in Brussels at the Vanderborght Building. Adult tickets are 13.50 euros ($16.15) each; tickets for under-26s are 7 euros ($8.40) each.

Daniela Berretta contributed to this report.

Islam Expo: http://www.expo-islam.be
 
Yes, all types of burkhas offend me irrespective of color.

The idea that such a garment is meant to be worn only by women is even more offensive.
 
Not really. I don't see anything offensive about it.
 
Yes, all types of burkhas offend me irrespective of color.

The idea that such a garment is meant to be worn only by women is even more offensive.

Does it offend you a mini skirt is only to be worn by a woman too? Why do you find it offensive?

As for the OP, I think its great as it shows just because a woman is covered doesnt make her any less a nation of European nations and she has the same rights as any other person here.
 
Does it offend you a mini skirt is only to be worn by a woman too? Why do you find it offensive?

If women are forced to wear mini skirts against their wishes by societal or religious dictats, I would find the mini skirt offensive too.
 
Yes, it definitely offends me, like [MENTION=134230]gani999[/MENTION] said, all burkhas offend me too
 
Does it offend you a mini skirt is only to be worn by a woman too? Why do you find it offensive?

As for the OP, I think its great as it shows just because a woman is covered doesnt make her any less a nation of European nations and she has the same rights as any other person here.

Nobody should be forced to wear something because certain religion asks them to do so.

If someone is wilfully wanting to wear a Burkha, then its fine. But nobody should force a girl to wear something against their wishes. Be it a Burqa or Bikini or Skirt.
 
Does it offend you a mini skirt is only to be worn by a woman too? Why do you find it offensive?

As for the OP, I think its great as it shows just because a woman is covered doesnt make her any less a nation of European nations and she has the same rights as any other person here.

I think the picture would have meant something else for Muslim Haters - basically suggesting that Islam is taking over Europe.
 
Yes, because veil has nothing to do with Islam.

Agree. Why are Muslims so hell bent on associating Islam only with the burka when it's a cultural practice? What about the millions of Muslims who don't agree with the burka? What about the Muslim women who wear mini skirts? Are they any less Muslim then the burka wearing one
 
I was once walking down a busy street in probably my favorite city in the world, Philadelphia, and I saw three women walking down the street fully covered in the buqab/niqab with only their eyes uncovered.

I immediately recoiled and did a double take. I then proceeded but wondered that if that was my reaction then I can only imagine how a white/black/Hispanic American not that exposed to Islam would react.

It made me feel uneasy.
 
Nobody should be forced to wear something because certain religion asks them to do so.

If someone is wilfully wanting to wear a Burkha, then its fine. But nobody should force a girl to wear something against their wishes. Be it a Burqa or Bikini or Skirt.

How many women have you met who have been forced to wear this?
 
No, women can wear what they feel like. Not sure why Indians would have a problem with that.
 
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From what I have come to realize that women defn get accustomed to hijab/burqa ,the pressure is not so much from men but from the judgmental women themselves(mother,mom-inlaw,aunty,dadi,naani etc.)
 
I am against burka but intention in this picture is obvious...
It will cause more Islamophobia...

These kind of response also undermine genuine critics of Islam as genuine criticism can be bundled with Islamophobia by apologists.
 
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