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[Video] Indian Comedian Munawar Faruqui Beaten Up, Arrested For Mocking Hindu Deities

"In neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, he is sought by the police in another case of allegedly insulting Hindu deities as well as Home Minister Amit Shah"
As well as Amit Shah

This is not how democracies work
 
People needs to re learn the concept of democracy. This has NOTHING to do with democracy.
 
People needs to re learn the concept of democracy. This has NOTHING to do with democracy.

"As well as Amit Shah" this is how democracies work
Your stupid statement makes any normal person's blood boil :inti

Another problem is
First demanding freedom of speech during the cartoon issue
But Now showing your hypocrisy by getting butt hurt over this issue of hindu diety

But you know forget this for a while

Just explain how criticizing a politician is a crime?
So SNL skits should be banned in US if states starts to follow your "democracy"

Absolutely looney tunes you got going on up there
 
[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] what's your thoughts on these charges of criticizing a politician?
 
[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] what's your thoughts on these charges of criticizing a politician?

Criticism and insult are different. if you call a politician corrupt, the only thing which saves you that you are too irrelevant to waste time on, but if that person sues you, you need to prove the corruption in court or be liable for punishment. this is a trivial charge by a third party, and not the politician himself and doesn't affect the case. The main issue is hurting religious sentiments and such people should pay the price of hurting the religious sentiments of millions of faithfuls like me.
 
[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] what's your thoughts on these charges of criticizing a politician?

My response was on the first page bro..trying to stay out of BJP threads today as my i’m clearly losing my cool :sanga
 
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Criticism and insult are different. if you call a politician corrupt, the only thing which saves you that you are too irrelevant to waste time on, but if that person sues you, you need to prove the corruption in court or be liable for punishment. this is a trivial charge by a third party, and not the politician himself and doesn't affect the case. The main issue is hurting religious sentiments and such people should pay the price of hurting the religious sentiments of millions of faithfuls like me.

Dude he probably made a joke which can be insulting how can that be a criminal offence?
People on media call politicians all sorts of things never hear them getting charged for it
Maybe sued but a "criminal offence" that's crazy
 
My response was on the first page bro..trying to stay out of BJP threads today as my i’m clearly losing my cool :sanga

Frankly I don't care about indian politics that much unlike my pakistani brethrens but this "charge" was especially stupid got me kinda mad

Really hard to defend... But people still will
 
Dude he probably made a joke which can be insulting how can that be a criminal offence?
People on media call politicians all sorts of things never hear them getting charged for it
Maybe sued but a "criminal offence" that's crazy

Heard of criminal defamation?
 
"As well as Amit Shah" this is how democracies work
Your stupid statement makes any normal person's blood boil :inti

Another problem is
First demanding freedom of speech during the cartoon issue
But Now showing your hypocrisy by getting butt hurt over this issue of hindu diety

But you know forget this for a while

Just explain how criticizing a politician is a crime?
So SNL skits should be banned in US if states starts to follow your "democracy"

Absolutely looney tunes you got going on up there

Charlie hebdo made cartoons on Hindu deities too. Its their freedom in France. Its the freedom of the french people to govern themselves as they wsnt to. It is this freedom that India supported.

If cartoons of the prophet(pbuh) were made in India, the creators would have been arrested.

Insulting religion is not allowed in India, thats our way of life, thats how we govern ourselves.

How is what US does is significant here?
 
More often than not I find myself wishing that these BJP led cowbelt states simply break away from India and form their own union where they can continue being the cesspits that they are.

That you have citizens being arrested simply for jokes in this day and age and the stupidity of people here defending these arrests pretty much tells you all you need to know about how much of this hindutva nonsense has crept into the minds of the ordinary indian middle class. Just shameful.
 
More often than not I find myself wishing that these BJP led cowbelt states simply break away from India and form their own union where they can continue being the cesspits that they are.

That you have citizens being arrested simply for jokes in this day and age and the stupidity of people here defending these arrests pretty much tells you all you need to know about how much of this hindutva nonsense has crept into the minds of the ordinary indian middle class. Just shameful.

"joke" depends upon with reference to the society and time. For example, in the same society, the office has been a famous comedy. But try to imitate the same now and it'll receive huge backslash. Even the creator has said he would be reluctant to make office in current time.

The comedians need to sense the situation and then make jokes accordingly. You shouldn't joke about deity especially in states such as UP, MP. Similarly one shouldn't joke about Prophet in Muslim majority community such as PP here which could hurt the feelings of muslims here.

Its just common sense. If you are devoid of it, you are responsible for whatever that comes along.
 
I am kind of impressed with the passivity of Indian Muslims- they are treated like 3rd class people by majority Hindus yet there is no reaction from them.

Where are the prominent Muslims speaking about the ongoing ,continuous systematic injustice against them? Are they really this oblivious to the existential crisis that their community faces?
 
I am kind of impressed with the passivity of Indian Muslims- they are treated like 3rd class people by majority Hindus yet there is no reaction from them.

Where are the prominent Muslims speaking about the ongoing ,continuous systematic injustice against them? Are they really this oblivious to the existential crisis that their community faces?

Indian muslims don't have their intellectual class who can lead them. Without leaders, you cannot do mass movements. So the only choice is to align with other parties who use them for their benefits, included the leftists.
 
I am kind of impressed with the passivity of Indian Muslims- they are treated like 3rd class people by majority Hindus yet there is no reaction from them.

Where are the prominent Muslims speaking about the ongoing ,continuous systematic injustice against them? Are they really this oblivious to the existential crisis that their community faces?

As I stated earlier, these issues are localized one and not system wide. Whilst in other states, such incidents occur very rarely, it'll be foolish to go against the system which itself working well for them. A localized issue should be raised in local level only.
 
I am kind of impressed with the passivity of Indian Muslims- they are treated like 3rd class people by majority Hindus yet there is no reaction from them.

Where are the prominent Muslims speaking about the ongoing ,continuous systematic injustice against them? Are they really this oblivious to the existential crisis that their community faces?

I am watching The White Tiger, the film based on the book which is showing on Netflix. The main guy in the film got his start as a driver by getting the main driver sacked as he was secretly a Muslim. That he had to hide this from his employer to keep his job tells you a lot about Indian society. I feel very sorry for Indian Muslims, can't be easy to be assertive as a minority in a country where mob law rules.
 
Just watched three of his videos on Youtube. Don't watch much standup, but this guy is the funniest of the lot I've seen. Not sure what he said wrong other than maybe foul language being ascribed to deities' imagined conversations.

Most of the jokes in his standup centre on Indian Muslims and their daily lives, burkhas, lack of education, multiple marriages and bike riding. Sure, I didn't see him crack a joke about their Prophet but I guess he was just being smart there :smith

But Hindu comics won't either.

Poor fellow didn't reckon the BJP is out to learn the worst aspects of Islamists and teach them to the Hindus of this country.

See, I have no problems with this had he made jokes about Islam and muslims as well. However problem with most muslims are; its ok to do it to others but they don't like when they have to face repercussions of their actions or what they did is done back to them..

Watches a 40 sec clip and expects to find other jokes in it too :shezzy2
 
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Just watched three of his videos on Youtube. Don't watch much standup, but this guy is the funniest of the lot I've seen. Not sure what he said wrong other than maybe foul language being ascribed to deities' imagined conversations.

Most of the jokes in his standup centre on Indian Muslims and their daily lives, burkhas, lack of education, multiple marriages and bike riding. Sure, I didn't see him crack a joke about their Prophet but I guess he was just being smart there :smith

But Hindu comics won't either.

Poor fellow didn't reckon the BJP is out to learn the worst aspects of Islamists and teach them to the Hindus of this country.



Watches a 40 sec clip and expects to find other jokes in it too :shezzy2

Competitive intolerance is also fine. Ideally ones intolerance should not be dependent on how much intolerant the other is.
 
Too much intolerance from apparently educated folks. No wonder it's easy to manipulate mob from nowhere when folks are so gullible. I guess their parents have wasted the money on college education, probably should have opened a paan shop(no disrespect to paan wala) for these folks as they don't need that education at all.

If you don't like something don't listen or see, no need to get violent unless you are physically harmed by somebody. You are getting manipulated by agenda of select few and giving control of your life to them.

Learn to live and let live. There will be conflicting views always, will you like if somebody forces you to follow their perspective?
 
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Criticism and insult are different. if you call a politician corrupt, the only thing which saves you that you are too irrelevant to waste time on, but if that person sues you, you need to prove the corruption in court or be liable for punishment. this is a trivial charge by a third party, and not the politician himself and doesn't affect the case. The main issue is hurting religious sentiments and such people should pay the price of hurting the religious sentiments of millions of faithfuls like me.

I condemned Munawar for those comments in that youtube video. But why is the police saying that according to them he didnt crack any bad jokes but was going to in future? If these are the charges, then i am afraid i don't support action against him and he is being treated unjustly.
 
I condemned Munawar for those comments in that youtube video. But why is the police saying that according to them he didnt crack any bad jokes but was going to in future? If these are the charges, then i am afraid i don't support action against him and he is being treated unjustly.

Police said he didn't crack any blasphemous jokes in that event, and they are right. He did it in previous events. They are also right that he would do the same in future, but obviously he is being treated for his past, not future. Don't take the word of the indian media who twist headlines, and get fooled by admission to harvard. indian journalists, across political spectrum, are imbeciles of the highest order.
 
Pakistanis seem to always joke, laugh, make fun in every other convo but Indians are way too serious, always in a mood.

Pakistan should give this man asylumn.
 
"joke" depends upon with reference to the society and time. For example, in the same society, the office has been a famous comedy. But try to imitate the same now and it'll receive huge backslash. Even the creator has said he would be reluctant to make office in current time.

What a foolish statement. Nobody in the US is going to get arrested for making 'The Office' today. Backlash on social media and cultural criticisms is completely different from being thrown into a cell and detained by the government.


Its just common sense. If you are devoid of it, you are responsible for whatever that comes along.

This is the same argument that Pak ppers used here to justify Charlie Hebdo and the French teacher beheading. Nice to see indians adapt this rubbish logic as well.
 
Charlie hebdo made cartoons on Hindu deities too. Its their freedom in France. Its the freedom of the french people to govern themselves as they wsnt to. It is this freedom that India supported.

If cartoons of the prophet(pbuh) were made in India, the creators would have been arrested.

Insulting religion is not allowed in India, thats our way of life, thats how we govern ourselves
.:facepalm:
It was in response to "his" take on French cartoon situation where I thaught he wanted freedom of speech on these cartoon "in general" and now the same courtesy is not being applied here
Also wrote
"But you know forget this for a while"
Meaning I thought discussions of cartoons would get this thread off-topic maybe a quick comment explaining "his" stance or where he is coming from would get the job done
How is what US does is significant here?
It was a cultural reference that I thaught Itachi would understand and help him see where I am coming from :facepalm: that's why it was significant only if you stop responding to other peoples convo's

Oh man you really shouldn't be butting into other people's convo I can tell you that much buddy!
 
What a foolish statement. Nobody in the US is going to get arrested for making 'The Office' today. Backlash on social media and cultural criticisms is completely different from being thrown into a cell and detained by the government.




This is the same argument that Pak ppers used here to justify Charlie Hebdo and the French teacher beheading. Nice to see indians adapt this rubbish logic as well.

I really wish/hope people around the world adopt the libertarian approach

Let people comment on religious dieties/gods cause in free societies you shouldn't be stoping people from speaking thier minds in whatever way they see fit

I got heat for this stance on cartoon thread and probably would here to...
 
What a foolish statement. Nobody in the US is going to get arrested for making 'The Office' today. Backlash on social media and cultural criticisms is completely different from being thrown into a cell and detained by the government.




This is the same argument that Pak ppers used here to justify Charlie Hebdo and the French teacher beheading. Nice to see indians adapt this rubbish logic as well.

unless you outrage enough, others will never know that it hurts you and will think you are ok with insult to your religion. There is no bravery in remaining silent when you are hurt. So this cowardice should not be glorified.
 
People needs to re learn the concept of democracy. This has NOTHING to do with democracy.

I stand corrected
Apparently he was charged for hinting that shah was involved in some train massacare
In the the beginning I thaught he was charged for insulting a public official/minister that's why the strong response from me

Although still against the spirit of democracy especially for someone of his position (I mean charging a comedian with a crime for his jokes is still too close to a banana republic for my liking) but not totally undemocratic, I got that wrong
 
Police said he didn't crack any blasphemous jokes in that event, and they are right. He did it in previous events. They are also right that he would do the same in future, but obviously he is being treated for his past, not future. Don't take the word of the indian media who twist headlines, and get fooled by admission to harvard. indian journalists, across political spectrum, are imbeciles of the highest order.

Is he being charged for making jokes in the past?
Is that part of the charge sheet against him? Yes or no.
 
What a foolish statement. Nobody in the US is going to get arrested for making 'The Office' today. Backlash on social media and cultural criticisms is completely different from being thrown into a cell and detained by the government.




This is the same argument that Pak ppers used here to justify Charlie Hebdo and the French teacher beheading. Nice to see indians adapt this rubbish logic as well.

1. The statement was made by the creator of the office himself and. Not my assumption.

2. In the name of freedom of speech, you can exercise your right. But you should also be prepared yourself for any backslash in the realm of the legal system.

The man, who draw the Prophet, the muslims could have used the legal system to voice their opinion. But one person took the matter on own hand which was wrong.

Is it hard to understand?
 
I really wish/hope people around the world adopt the libertarian approach

Let people comment on religious dieties/gods cause in free societies you shouldn't be stoping people from speaking thier minds in whatever way they see fit

I got heat for this stance on cartoon thread and probably would here to...

Which country has unlimited free speech? In the US race is the taboo topic. Your career is over if you say something racist. In Europe its the Holocaust. Deny it you are going to jail. So same way in subcontinent its religion. Dont make religious jokes in that part of the world.
 
Which country has unlimited free speech? In the US race is the taboo topic. Your career is over if you say something racist. In Europe its the Holocaust. Deny it you are going to jail. So same way in subcontinent its religion. Dont make religious jokes in that part of the world.

There is no true free society and that's the case I am trying to make
A free and open society where everyone has the freedom to express thier thoughts without the fear of getting in legal trouble

Sure private companies can take action against what they don't like (like firing, deplatformimg)
Even gov can take action against it's employees to maintain it's nuteral image
But legal trouble for expressing your thaughts (right/wrong, left/right) should not exist in society
An out there idea sure but something I really think can benefit society in the long run
 
There is nothing wrong with him being arrested if he had insulted or joked about Hindu gods.

Issue in this case is as follows:
He was arrested by vigilantes.
That there is no proof he did anything at the comedy show. The police said he was "going to do it".
There were 5 people arrested by the police, however per Indian media articles it appears hes the only being denied bail.

Now after there was no evidence found they are trying to use an old video where he apparently uses a reference to Hindus Gods in a joke (which was not funny). Will the same type of statement by a non Muslim get them arrested? I doubt it.

Will police start searching for old videos to see if there was person insulting Islam? Half of BJP leaders can be arrested then. They have said way more wile things about Islam then this joker did.
 
There is no true free society and that's the case I am trying to make
A free and open society where everyone has the freedom to express thier thoughts without the fear of getting in legal trouble

I dont think that will ever happen.

Sure private companies can take action against what they don't like (like firing, deplatformimg)
Even gov can take action against it's employees to maintain it's nuteral image
But legal trouble for expressing your thaughts (right/wrong, left/right) should not exist in society
An out there idea sure but something I really think can benefit society in the long run

Unless you are independently wealthy, taking action against you for speech that is not PC, is the same as making it illegal.
 
There is nothing wrong with him being arrested if he had insulted or joked about Hindu gods.

Issue in this case is as follows:
He was arrested by vigilantes.
That there is no proof he did anything at the comedy show. The police said he was "going to do it".
There were 5 people arrested by the police, however per Indian media articles it appears hes the only being denied bail.

Now after there was no evidence found they are trying to use an old video where he apparently uses a reference to Hindus Gods in a joke (which was not funny). Will the same type of statement by a non Muslim get them arrested? I doubt it.

Will police start searching for old videos to see if there was person insulting Islam? Half of BJP leaders can be arrested then. They have said way more wile things about Islam then this joker did.

Its media reporting. He won't be arrested unless there was an FIR. His lawyers wouldn't have allowed it. The above are speculation of people and media.
 
Is he being charged for making jokes in the past?
Is that part of the charge sheet against him? Yes or no.

I haven't seen the chargesheet as this is not hot topic among cops fraternity. It you have the chargesheet can you share it?

I saw the remarks by the learned judge and there were excellent remarks and talked about coexistence and diversity and how negative forces trying to pollute it should be dealt with by the state.
 
I haven't seen the chargesheet as this is not hot topic among cops fraternity. It you have the chargesheet can you share it?

I saw the remarks by the learned judge and there were excellent remarks and talked about coexistence and diversity and how negative forces trying to pollute it should be dealt with by the state.

No i dont have the chargesheet. However, there is not even one statement by the police where they have said that Munawar mocked any deities. If there is, please show me and i will be convinced. There is continuously only one thing which is being highlighted. That the police said Munawar made no such jokes but was going to in future. This means his past jokes are not considered punishable by the police and he is being punished for a "potential crime" which he might commit in future. If this is the case, and it looks like this is the case, then I will have to revise my position. Clearly Munawar is being unfairly harrassed while Arnab who shared a national secret and mocked the killed Jawans is left free to scream his lungs out.
 
No i dont have the chargesheet. However, there is not even one statement by the police where they have said that Munawar mocked any deities. If there is, please show me and i will be convinced. There is continuously only one thing which is being highlighted. That the police said Munawar made no such jokes but was going to in future. This means his past jokes are not considered punishable by the police and he is being punished for a "potential crime" which he might commit in future. If this is the case, and it looks like this is the case, then I will have to revise my position. Clearly Munawar is being unfairly harrassed while Arnab who shared a national secret and mocked the killed Jawans is left free to scream his lungs out.

I am showing you the moon, and you are looking at my finger. Did he or did he not insult hindu deities in the past? Everything else is semantics based.
 
I am showing you the moon, and you are looking at my finger. Did he or did he not insult hindu deities in the past? Everything else is semantics based.

No. He made inappropriate jokes and we all condemned him for it. But that was in our personal capacity. How the law looks at this case is different. Clearly the police doesnt think he made punishable jokes. This is what matters. Not what we feel in our personal capacity. They are punishing him for an entirely different thing. A joke he might make in future. That is ridiculous. And you have misled me on this. I trusted you. Alas, this is not the first time a Kashmiri has been backstabbed by an Indian.
 
See, I have no problems with this had he made jokes about Islam and muslims as well. However problem with most muslims are; its ok to do it to others but they don't like when they have to face repercussions of their actions or what they did is done back to them..

I think Muslims are happy for you guys to follow your own principles, whatever they are regarding to insulting hindu holy deities. Muslims will not quietly stand for insulting the Prophet PBUH, that is very clearly spelled out.

I really don't see why you expect a different religious group to adopt your principles, this is where Islam is much more tolerant and allows for different views to be held by different faiths. So if hindus argue that insulting deities and religious figures is okay, then secular Muslims should be allowed to indulge same as secular hindus.
 
No. He made inappropriate jokes and we all condemned him for it. But that was in our personal capacity. How the law looks at this case is different. Clearly the police doesnt think he made punishable jokes. This is what matters. Not what we feel in our personal capacity. They are punishing him for an entirely different thing. A joke he might make in future. That is ridiculous. And you have misled me on this. I trusted you. Alas, this is not the first time a Kashmiri has been backstabbed by an Indian.

I may have backstabbed you, but not because you are a kashmiri.

Why do the cops need to make their case weak by talking about future crimes, a la minority report against minorities, when they have evidence of it being done in the past, and which is sufficient to push a case?
 
I may have backstabbed you, but not because you are a kashmiri.

Why do the cops need to make their case weak by talking about future crimes, a la minority report against minorities, when they have evidence of it being done in the past, and which is sufficient to push a case?

You should pose this question to the cops who are the ones making such stupid statements and not talking about his past jokes (which are indeed condemnable).
 
You should pose this question to the cops who are the ones making such stupid statements and not talking about his past jokes (which are indeed condemnable).

It is the media who are jaahils. The best among them are so dumb that they become fake harvard professors, or caught spreading fake news, or mislead with tv ratings. Equally dumb indians get their information from such jaahils.
 
I think Muslims are happy for you guys to follow your own principles, whatever they are regarding to insulting hindu holy deities. Muslims will not quietly stand for insulting the Prophet PBUH, that is very clearly spelled out.

I really don't see why you expect a different religious group to adopt your principles, this is where Islam is much more tolerant and allows for different views to be held by different faiths. So if hindus argue that insulting deities and religious figures is okay, then secular Muslims should be allowed to indulge same as secular hindus.

If muslims cant insult their prophet then shouldn't say a word about other religions prophets gods or deity's, they need to just shush their mouth Or if some muslims are dumb enough to do it in a country like India, then suffer the consequences for it simple... No need to cry about OH Oh Muslim is a victim, poor muslim..
 
This so called comedian has no right to insult Hinduism. He would be the first one to spew venom when Islam is attacked by others. I find stand up comedians to be a pain in the @ss anyway, they are just not funny.
 
I think Muslims are happy for you guys to follow your own principles, whatever they are regarding to insulting hindu holy deities. Muslims will not quietly stand for insulting the Prophet PBUH, that is very clearly spelled out.

I really don't see why you expect a different religious group to adopt your principles, this is where Islam is much more tolerant and allows for different views to be held by different faiths. So if hindus argue that insulting deities and religious figures is okay, then secular Muslims should be allowed to indulge same as secular hindus.
No that doesn’t works like Muslims are forbidden to say something foolish about idols etc according to Quran. Furthermore (just for example) nobody will give your father a word when you does not do either
 
If muslims cant insult their prophet then shouldn't say a word about other religions prophets gods or deity's, they need to just shush their mouth Or if some muslims are dumb enough to do it in a country like India, then suffer the consequences for it simple... No need to cry about OH Oh Muslim is a victim, poor muslim..

You are assuming all Muslims are religious, that is clearly not the case even in Muslim countries let alone India. If secular hindus and sikhs can insult hindu deities in India, then secular Muslims should be allowed the same liberty.

If on the other hand, insulting deities is against the law in India, then all the Indian posters here should not be arguing on behalf of Hebdo, and Indian govt should not be sending messages of support to Macron for using govt buildings to insult the Muslim Prophet PBUH. This is clear and blatant hypocrisy, and showcases uncalled for hatred and disregard for India's own Muslim population.

India should make clear it's stance on religious satire and stick to it. Supporting France for no reason has caused confusion and invited ridicule on two faced posturing of Indian govt.
 
So Munawar is still in jail. Any update about the 5 others arrested along with him? Are they not well connected? All must be released, shame on our judiciary.
 
You are assuming all Muslims are religious, that is clearly not the case even in Muslim countries let alone India. If secular hindus and sikhs can insult hindu deities in India, then secular Muslims should be allowed the same liberty.

If on the other hand, insulting deities is against the law in India, then all the Indian posters here should not be arguing on behalf of Hebdo, and Indian govt should not be sending messages of support to Macron for using govt buildings to insult the Muslim Prophet PBUH. This is clear and blatant hypocrisy, and showcases uncalled for hatred and disregard for India's own Muslim population.

India should make clear it's stance on religious satire and stick to it. Supporting France for no reason has caused confusion and invited ridicule on two faced posturing of Indian govt.

That’s the dumbest thing I have heard while I am not surprised, it doesn’t work that way.

For example generalizations of some (key word some) British Pakistanis (I admit is not cool to have generalizations) is not viewed the same way as say in a Biritish production starring British Pakistanis like 4lions. Context and sensibilities matter

I am sure you being as west as it gets has a different treshold but will it be the same if a white comedian makes a joke about Brit-Pakistanis vs a comedian of Pakistan origin doing the same? They are from the same country aren’t they? I see make self
Deprecating jokes all the time about themselves but tread carefully at least in 2020-2021
 
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I have been following this hilarious comic for a while, would what he said be considered offensive?

See from 4.15 onwards


Btw there was a hilarious 30 minute stand up by a South Indian guy explaining the Mahabaratha in a very funny but non offensive way but I can't seem to find it anymore. it was in my saved list but it has been deleted and I can't remember the guys name (saw it about 2 years ago). Would be great if someone here could help. [MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] [MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION]
 
That’s the dumbest thing I have heard while I am not surprised, it doesn’t work that way.

For example generalizations of some (key word some) British Pakistanis (I admit is not cool to have generalizations) is not viewed the same way as say in a Biritish production starring British Pakistanis like 4lions. Context and sensibilities matter

I am sure you being as west as it gets has a different treshold but will it be the same if a white comedian makes a joke about Brit-Pakistanis vs a comedian of Pakistan origin doing the same? They are from the same country aren’t they? I see make self
Deprecating jokes all the time about themselves but tread carefully at least in 2020-2021

Not really sure what your point was there. Are you saying it should be okay for secular hindus to mock their deities, but secular Muslims should back off?
 
Not really sure what your point was there. Are you saying it should be okay for secular hindus to mock their deities, but secular Muslims should back off?

That’s ok I will repeat slowly. I understand.

I was saying there are different sensibilities that apply when you are talking about your own culture/religion vs someone else’s culture/religion .

Doesn’t make it right or wrong.

Bet, you are going to ask me to explain again. No problem.
 
If muslims cant insult their prophet then shouldn't say a word about other religions prophets gods or deity's, they need to just shush their mouth Or if some muslims are dumb enough to do it in a country like India, then suffer the consequences for it simple... No need to cry about OH Oh Muslim is a victim, poor muslim..

Whose crying though? You seem to have a very basic Muslim vs Hindu mentality which is probably instilled in you by your media . From what I have seen majority of Muslims are against what that guy allegedly did (if he actually did insult religious figures). Although obviously the mob beating is wrong.

Most of his support is coming from secular/liberal groups not religious ones . So not sure why the rant against Muslims lol.
 
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That’s ok I will repeat slowly. I understand.

I was saying there are different sensibilities that apply when you are talking about your own culture/religion vs someone else’s culture/religion .

Doesn’t make it right or wrong.

Bet, you are going to ask me to explain again. No problem.

Well you could just try giving a straight answer to a simple question, then would be much clearer. You still didn't answer it by the way. Here it is again for clarity sake:

Are you saying it should be okay for secular hindus to mock their deities, but secular Muslims should back off?
 
Btw there was a hilarious 30 minute stand up by a South Indian guy explaining the Mahabaratha in a very funny but non offensive way but I can't seem to find it anymore. it was in my saved list but it has been deleted and I can't remember the guys name (saw it about 2 years ago). Would be great if someone here could help. [MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] [MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION]

Sorry buddy, I don't follow stand-up comedy, could never cultivate interest, literally zero knowledge :|
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We have witnessed the horrors of Emergency when freedom of press & freedom of expression were suppressed. It is a blot on our democracy.</p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/462443398482247680?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 3, 2014</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
I have been following this hilarious comic for a while, would what he said be considered offensive?

See from 4.15 onwards


Btw there was a hilarious 30 minute stand up by a South Indian guy explaining the Mahabaratha in a very funny but non offensive way but I can't seem to find it anymore. it was in my saved list but it has been deleted and I can't remember the guys name (saw it about 2 years ago). Would be great if someone here could help. [MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] [MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION]

I do watch but no idea bro who that would be.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We have witnessed the horrors of Emergency when freedom of press & freedom of expression were suppressed. It is a blot on our democracy.</p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/462443398482247680?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 3, 2014</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Your half knowledge at display. Aain-e-hind allows freedom of expression as a fundamental right but with riders, not offending religious sensitivities being one. Wonder why all those who want FOE never talk against removing 295a of tazirat-e-hind and instead bark as if laws are being subverted.
 
Munawar Faruqui was finally released.

Now that I am paying attention, it is horrifying, how relentless the Hindu right wing along with the media is in vilifying Muslims.

Reading BJP twitter or watching Aaj Tak and they are just non stop in creating hatred against Muslims- it would be so easy to get brain washed by these bigots.
 
Munawar Faruqui was finally released.

Now that I am paying attention, it is horrifying, how relentless the Hindu right wing along with the media is in vilifying Muslims.

Reading BJP twitter or watching Aaj Tak and they are just non stop in creating hatred against Muslims- it would be so easy to get brain washed by these bigots.

What happened to the 3 hindus and 1 christian who were arrested? Were they released?

Now that I am paying attention, it is horrifying, how relentless the left loonies only care about one religion and don't care about justice for others. Such bigots.
 
It was going to be the best year of Munawar Iqbal Faruqui’s life. The 29-year-old stand-up comic from Mumbai was set to complete his first tour of India. His YouTube channel had crossed 500,000 subscribers. And in the spring, he was to perform his first international show in Dubai. “His dreams were coming true,” a close family member, who asked not to be named, told me.

Everything changed on the evening of Jan. 1, when a group of Hindu nationalists walked into the café in Indore, a city in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, where Faruqui was to perform, clad in jeans and trendy white sneakers. One of the men forced his way onto the stage and accused the stand-up, who is Muslim, of hurting Hindu sentiments. The intruder was referring not to a joke Faruqui had just made, but one that he’d uploaded on YouTube in April 2020. It referenced Rama, a widely worshipped Hindu deity, and his wife Sita. “O Lord, my beloved, has come home,” Faruqui starts, dropping lyrics from an enormously popular Bollywood song in which a woman celebrates the return of her lover. Then comes the punchline: “Ramji don’t give a f-ck about your beloved.” The audience erupts. “He says, ‘I myself haven’t returned home for fourteen years.”

Faruqui addressed the intruder, who was only a few years older as “sir.” He explained that he had made many more jokes about his own community than he ever had about Hindus. He expressed regret over the joke, which had long since been deleted from YouTube, but pointed out that he’d been punished already. Online commentators had sent him death threats. Two police complaints were filed against him.

After some back and forth the intruder appeared to accept Faruqui’s apology and made his way down from the stage. A woman called out to him, “Sir, listen to me, Hindus and Muslims are brothers.” The crowd hooted and clapped. Someone shouted, “Munawar we are with you!” The comedian raised his arm in a gesture of appreciation.

The intruder was later identified as Aklavya Laxman Singh Gaur, the son of the city’s mayor who is a long-time member of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The Hindu hardline party led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has dominated Indian political life since 2014. Gaur is himself a member of Hind Rakshak, one of an innumerable number of Hindu outfits affiliated with the BJP. Gaur left, but within minutes, the police barged in to arrest Faruqui.

It soon seemed clear that the sequence of events—the onstage grandstanding followed by an orchestrated arrest—had been arranged in advance. No matter what he did that night, Faruqui was going to be punished. The comic was accused of making “indecent” and “vulgar” remarks about Hindu deities and charged under several sections of the Indian Penal Code, including 295 A: “Deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage reli*gious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or reli*gious beliefs.” He was facing up to four years in prison. Four of his associates were also arrested that evening.

Two days later, under press scrutiny, the police admitted that the claims against Faruqui relied entirely on the word of the Hindu nationalist intruder. But the police superintendent in charge was defiant. He accused Faruqui of the “intent” to offend. “The system has so much power now that they can suppress you without any evidence,” Varun Grover, a popular stand-up comic and screenwriter who has come out in support of Faruqui, told TIME. “It doesn’t matter that [Munawar] didn’t even cross any pre-existing red line—they can create new arbitrary red lines on the ground and arrest you for your thoughts.”

There were potentially worse things ahead for Faruqui. The police in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh had acted on one of the complaints filed against him last year and a warrant was put out for his arrest. This meant that even if he got bail in this case, he faced re-arrest and jail in Uttar Pradesh, a state run by the Hindu priest Yogi Adityanath who has called Muslims “a crop of two-legged animals that has to be stopped.”

Faruqui’s arrest is another example of the majoritarian wave sweeping India. A hardline group attacked him without provocation. Then the police, whose only evidence comes from a contested claim, took him to jail. Finally, the lower courts repeatedly denied him bail, which is commonly granted under trials in India, despite what seemed to be the absence of reasonable grounds to believe he had committed an offense. The sequence of events raises questions that go beyond mobs, politics, and police—which is whether there is justice in India at all. Speaking to TIME from Delhi, Faruqui’s lawyer, Vivek Tankha described the events as “the art of the ridiculous.”

Across India, there are clear signs that freedom of speech is being systematically attacked. A database published by the website Article 14 showed that of the 405 cases filed for criticizing politicians and governments over the last decade, 96% were registered after 2014, when Modi came to power. One hundred and forty-nine people have been accused of making “critical” and/or “derogatory” remarks against the prime minister. And in early February police in two BJP-ruled states introduced further anti free speech measures. In Uttrakhand, the police announced that they will be monitoring social media and that anyone found to be “anti-national” or “anti-social” “must be prepared for dire consequences.” In Bihar, the police said that protesters may not be eligible for government jobs, bank loans and passports. And in Kashmir, India’s only Muslim majority region, which is administered from the national capital, the police invited volunteers or “content flaggers” from the public to help them monitor online activity. One civil right activist pointed out that the move could turn into “a witch hunt.”

At Faruqui’s last bail hearing, on Jan. 25, the presiding judge said, “Such people must not be spared.” And so Faruqui remained in Indore Central Jail, a place that is crammed with almost twice as many prisoners as it was built to hold and has already witnessed an outbreak of COVID-19. “Is this a democracy?” Tankha, the lawyer, wondered.

Comedian Munawar Faruqui, a Muslim, was arrested in January in Indore, India, on charges of insulting Hindus.
Comedian Munawar Faruqui, a Muslim, was arrested in January in Indore, India, on charges of insulting Hindus. Courtesy of Saad Shaikh
The son of an impoverished driver, Faruqui had worked hard to achieve the Indian middle-class dream. Stand-up comedy is still in a nascent stage in India, and Faruqui was among a small group of comics and an even smaller group of Muslim comics. His friend and fellow comic Saad Sheikh says that Faruqui had wanted to use humor to challenge negative stereotypes about their community. At a time of dangerous religious polarization, Faruqui wanted to convey that Hindus and Muslims shared a culture. Faruqui’s message, Sheikh says, was that “we’re not that different from you.”

Faruqui had emerged from a set of circumstances that were unique to his religious identity. He was a child in the city of Junagarh in the state of Gujarat in 2002 at the time of the anti-Muslim pogrom that took place when Modi was chief minister. “I was born and brought up in Gujarat,” Faruqui has joked. “Survived in Gujarat.” But while he had experienced hatred he did not himself succumb to it. His friendship group remained mixed and he refused to see himself as a target, Sheikh says.

When he was 16, Faruqui’s mother died by suicide and his father moved the family to Mumbai to start afresh. There, his father found work as a driver. Faruqui had already dropped out of school, and worked as a shop assistant, selling utensils. He taught himself Hindi and English, attaining such a level of proficiency that he later performed in both languages. After his father’s health deteriorated, Faruqui assumed still greater responsibilities—his three sisters had to be married, and weddings meant dowries. Early last year, Faruqui’s father passed away leaving him with the full responsibility of family affairs.

By his early twenties, Faruqui was working as a graphic designer at a reputable firm. When some stand-up comics on YouTube caught his eye, Faruqui decided that was what he really wanted to do. “I’ve gained a lot and lost a lot,” he said. “But I want to make people laugh.” After working all day, he wrote jokes in the evenings and practiced on family. He attended open mic events in cafes, paying to perform before a crowd, as often as three or four times in one night. Sometimes, a close family member tells TIME, he arrived back home at 1 a.m.

With his boyish good looks, trendy sweatshirts and the plentiful f-bombs with which he peppered his jokes, Faruqui appeared to fit right in with his privileged middle-class audience. But his repertoire might have given him away. He didn’t shy from pointed social commentary. “TikTok is the second most hated community in this country,” he said in one set. “You know which the first one is.”

Last year, after he started his YouTube channel, some of his videos got more than 2 million views. He was offered lucrative gigs performing on college campuses and could afford to leave his job and focus on comedy. He rapped, recited poetry and composed music. “The dream was stand up,” says Sagar Punjabi, another friend and fellow comic. “But the ambition is endless.”

Kunal Kamra, another popular stand-up comic, with more than 1 million Twitter followers, describes Faruqui as a “breakthrough act.” “The Indian stand up scene is pretty close knit,” he told TIME “and it’s very difficult to make it.” But Faruqui had succeeded by sheer diligence. “He is always out there trying out new material.”

Kamra’s own life was an example of just how dangerous the pursuit of even just a laugh had become in India. After he took aim at government policies, the comic received death threats and was evicted from his apartment. And last December, Kamra was sent a contempt notice because of some tweets that criticized the Supreme Court. “If you want a career in the arts in India,” he said, “it should by now be clear that you should hide your opinions. Or befriend many, many lawyers.”

In January, a few days after Faruqui was sent to jail, Hindu nationalists again claimed offence, this time over a fictional political drama on Amazon called Tandav. The director Ali Abbas Zafar was quick to issue a public apology and even went to the extreme step of deleting scenes, but he was still named in police complaints in six states along with members of his cast and crew.

Zafar and Faruqui were only exercising their right to free speech. But as Muslims, the two entertainers were under a magnifying glass. Attacks on Muslims have now become so routine that they blur together and appear inevitable. Asked why he doesn’t post many of his videos online one Muslim comic recently told the Lounge newspaper, “Because Munawar is in jail. The offense-taking machinery is not random.” Kamra, the stand-up comic, agrees: “It is not what Munawar said, it is who he is.”

This message has been clearly transmitted and equally clearly received. Although members of Faruqui’s immediate family spoke to me over a period of two weeks they asked that I not publish their names. “You know what it’s like in India,” one said. “They go after wives and sisters, they say ‘we’ll rape them on the street.’”

On February 5, a Friday, the Supreme Court granted Faruqui bail. He had by then spent 37 days in jail. The Court described the allegations laid out against the comic as “vague” and said that the police hadn’t followed procedure while arresting him. It also stayed the warrant from the police in Uttar Pradesh.

“The order was in place, his lawyers, his family was outside the jail,” reported NDTV, but officials initially refused to release him, saying they had yet to receive the order from the Supreme Court. “Our police has not done anything wrong,” said Vishwas Sarang, a BJP minister in the Madhya Pradesh state cabinet. Why should anyone be allowed to make fun of Hindu Gods and Goddesses?” Sarang’s words, said one of Faruqui’s lawyers, explained the “highly unusual behavior of the jail administration.” It was around midnight on Saturday, February 6, that the comic was finally allowed to walk out of jail, not a free man, merely free for now. “I have full faith in the judiciary,” he told NDTV. His four associates remain in prison.
Munawar Iqbal Faruqui was the face of the Indian dream. An example of how an individual’s economic circumstances and religion need never stand in the way of his ambition and skill. His dream is on hold, but the stand-up comic remains the face of his country—a place where dreams can quickly turn into nightmares.



https://time.com/5938047/munawar-iqbal-faruqui-comedian-india/
 
It was going to be the best year of Munawar Iqbal Faruqui’s life. The 29-year-old stand-up comic from Mumbai was set to complete his first tour of India. His YouTube channel had crossed 500,000 subscribers. And in the spring, he was to perform his first international show in Dubai. “His dreams were coming true,” a close family member, who asked not to be named, told me.

Everything changed on the evening of Jan. 1, when a group of Hindu nationalists walked into the café in Indore, a city in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, where Faruqui was to perform, clad in jeans and trendy white sneakers. One of the men forced his way onto the stage and accused the stand-up, who is Muslim, of hurting Hindu sentiments. The intruder was referring not to a joke Faruqui had just made, but one that he’d uploaded on YouTube in April 2020. It referenced Rama, a widely worshipped Hindu deity, and his wife Sita. “O Lord, my beloved, has come home,” Faruqui starts, dropping lyrics from an enormously popular Bollywood song in which a woman celebrates the return of her lover. Then comes the punchline: “Ramji don’t give a f-ck about your beloved.” The audience erupts. “He says, ‘I myself haven’t returned home for fourteen years.”

Faruqui addressed the intruder, who was only a few years older as “sir.” He explained that he had made many more jokes about his own community than he ever had about Hindus. He expressed regret over the joke, which had long since been deleted from YouTube, but pointed out that he’d been punished already. Online commentators had sent him death threats. Two police complaints were filed against him.

After some back and forth the intruder appeared to accept Faruqui’s apology and made his way down from the stage. A woman called out to him, “Sir, listen to me, Hindus and Muslims are brothers.” The crowd hooted and clapped. Someone shouted, “Munawar we are with you!” The comedian raised his arm in a gesture of appreciation.

The intruder was later identified as Aklavya Laxman Singh Gaur, the son of the city’s mayor who is a long-time member of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The Hindu hardline party led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has dominated Indian political life since 2014. Gaur is himself a member of Hind Rakshak, one of an innumerable number of Hindu outfits affiliated with the BJP. Gaur left, but within minutes, the police barged in to arrest Faruqui.

It soon seemed clear that the sequence of events—the onstage grandstanding followed by an orchestrated arrest—had been arranged in advance. No matter what he did that night, Faruqui was going to be punished. The comic was accused of making “indecent” and “vulgar” remarks about Hindu deities and charged under several sections of the Indian Penal Code, including 295 A: “Deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage reli*gious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or reli*gious beliefs.” He was facing up to four years in prison. Four of his associates were also arrested that evening.

Two days later, under press scrutiny, the police admitted that the claims against Faruqui relied entirely on the word of the Hindu nationalist intruder. But the police superintendent in charge was defiant. He accused Faruqui of the “intent” to offend. “The system has so much power now that they can suppress you without any evidence,” Varun Grover, a popular stand-up comic and screenwriter who has come out in support of Faruqui, told TIME. “It doesn’t matter that [Munawar] didn’t even cross any pre-existing red line—they can create new arbitrary red lines on the ground and arrest you for your thoughts.”

There were potentially worse things ahead for Faruqui. The police in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh had acted on one of the complaints filed against him last year and a warrant was put out for his arrest. This meant that even if he got bail in this case, he faced re-arrest and jail in Uttar Pradesh, a state run by the Hindu priest Yogi Adityanath who has called Muslims “a crop of two-legged animals that has to be stopped.”

Faruqui’s arrest is another example of the majoritarian wave sweeping India. A hardline group attacked him without provocation. Then the police, whose only evidence comes from a contested claim, took him to jail. Finally, the lower courts repeatedly denied him bail, which is commonly granted under trials in India, despite what seemed to be the absence of reasonable grounds to believe he had committed an offense. The sequence of events raises questions that go beyond mobs, politics, and police—which is whether there is justice in India at all. Speaking to TIME from Delhi, Faruqui’s lawyer, Vivek Tankha described the events as “the art of the ridiculous.”

Across India, there are clear signs that freedom of speech is being systematically attacked. A database published by the website Article 14 showed that of the 405 cases filed for criticizing politicians and governments over the last decade, 96% were registered after 2014, when Modi came to power. One hundred and forty-nine people have been accused of making “critical” and/or “derogatory” remarks against the prime minister. And in early February police in two BJP-ruled states introduced further anti free speech measures. In Uttrakhand, the police announced that they will be monitoring social media and that anyone found to be “anti-national” or “anti-social” “must be prepared for dire consequences.” In Bihar, the police said that protesters may not be eligible for government jobs, bank loans and passports. And in Kashmir, India’s only Muslim majority region, which is administered from the national capital, the police invited volunteers or “content flaggers” from the public to help them monitor online activity. One civil right activist pointed out that the move could turn into “a witch hunt.”

At Faruqui’s last bail hearing, on Jan. 25, the presiding judge said, “Such people must not be spared.” And so Faruqui remained in Indore Central Jail, a place that is crammed with almost twice as many prisoners as it was built to hold and has already witnessed an outbreak of COVID-19. “Is this a democracy?” Tankha, the lawyer, wondered.

Comedian Munawar Faruqui, a Muslim, was arrested in January in Indore, India, on charges of insulting Hindus.
Comedian Munawar Faruqui, a Muslim, was arrested in January in Indore, India, on charges of insulting Hindus. Courtesy of Saad Shaikh
The son of an impoverished driver, Faruqui had worked hard to achieve the Indian middle-class dream. Stand-up comedy is still in a nascent stage in India, and Faruqui was among a small group of comics and an even smaller group of Muslim comics. His friend and fellow comic Saad Sheikh says that Faruqui had wanted to use humor to challenge negative stereotypes about their community. At a time of dangerous religious polarization, Faruqui wanted to convey that Hindus and Muslims shared a culture. Faruqui’s message, Sheikh says, was that “we’re not that different from you.”

Faruqui had emerged from a set of circumstances that were unique to his religious identity. He was a child in the city of Junagarh in the state of Gujarat in 2002 at the time of the anti-Muslim pogrom that took place when Modi was chief minister. “I was born and brought up in Gujarat,” Faruqui has joked. “Survived in Gujarat.” But while he had experienced hatred he did not himself succumb to it. His friendship group remained mixed and he refused to see himself as a target, Sheikh says.

When he was 16, Faruqui’s mother died by suicide and his father moved the family to Mumbai to start afresh. There, his father found work as a driver. Faruqui had already dropped out of school, and worked as a shop assistant, selling utensils. He taught himself Hindi and English, attaining such a level of proficiency that he later performed in both languages. After his father’s health deteriorated, Faruqui assumed still greater responsibilities—his three sisters had to be married, and weddings meant dowries. Early last year, Faruqui’s father passed away leaving him with the full responsibility of family affairs.

By his early twenties, Faruqui was working as a graphic designer at a reputable firm. When some stand-up comics on YouTube caught his eye, Faruqui decided that was what he really wanted to do. “I’ve gained a lot and lost a lot,” he said. “But I want to make people laugh.” After working all day, he wrote jokes in the evenings and practiced on family. He attended open mic events in cafes, paying to perform before a crowd, as often as three or four times in one night. Sometimes, a close family member tells TIME, he arrived back home at 1 a.m.

With his boyish good looks, trendy sweatshirts and the plentiful f-bombs with which he peppered his jokes, Faruqui appeared to fit right in with his privileged middle-class audience. But his repertoire might have given him away. He didn’t shy from pointed social commentary. “TikTok is the second most hated community in this country,” he said in one set. “You know which the first one is.”

Last year, after he started his YouTube channel, some of his videos got more than 2 million views. He was offered lucrative gigs performing on college campuses and could afford to leave his job and focus on comedy. He rapped, recited poetry and composed music. “The dream was stand up,” says Sagar Punjabi, another friend and fellow comic. “But the ambition is endless.”

Kunal Kamra, another popular stand-up comic, with more than 1 million Twitter followers, describes Faruqui as a “breakthrough act.” “The Indian stand up scene is pretty close knit,” he told TIME “and it’s very difficult to make it.” But Faruqui had succeeded by sheer diligence. “He is always out there trying out new material.”

Kamra’s own life was an example of just how dangerous the pursuit of even just a laugh had become in India. After he took aim at government policies, the comic received death threats and was evicted from his apartment. And last December, Kamra was sent a contempt notice because of some tweets that criticized the Supreme Court. “If you want a career in the arts in India,” he said, “it should by now be clear that you should hide your opinions. Or befriend many, many lawyers.”

In January, a few days after Faruqui was sent to jail, Hindu nationalists again claimed offence, this time over a fictional political drama on Amazon called Tandav. The director Ali Abbas Zafar was quick to issue a public apology and even went to the extreme step of deleting scenes, but he was still named in police complaints in six states along with members of his cast and crew.

Zafar and Faruqui were only exercising their right to free speech. But as Muslims, the two entertainers were under a magnifying glass. Attacks on Muslims have now become so routine that they blur together and appear inevitable. Asked why he doesn’t post many of his videos online one Muslim comic recently told the Lounge newspaper, “Because Munawar is in jail. The offense-taking machinery is not random.” Kamra, the stand-up comic, agrees: “It is not what Munawar said, it is who he is.”

This message has been clearly transmitted and equally clearly received. Although members of Faruqui’s immediate family spoke to me over a period of two weeks they asked that I not publish their names. “You know what it’s like in India,” one said. “They go after wives and sisters, they say ‘we’ll rape them on the street.’”

On February 5, a Friday, the Supreme Court granted Faruqui bail. He had by then spent 37 days in jail. The Court described the allegations laid out against the comic as “vague” and said that the police hadn’t followed procedure while arresting him. It also stayed the warrant from the police in Uttar Pradesh.

“The order was in place, his lawyers, his family was outside the jail,” reported NDTV, but officials initially refused to release him, saying they had yet to receive the order from the Supreme Court. “Our police has not done anything wrong,” said Vishwas Sarang, a BJP minister in the Madhya Pradesh state cabinet. Why should anyone be allowed to make fun of Hindu Gods and Goddesses?” Sarang’s words, said one of Faruqui’s lawyers, explained the “highly unusual behavior of the jail administration.” It was around midnight on Saturday, February 6, that the comic was finally allowed to walk out of jail, not a free man, merely free for now. “I have full faith in the judiciary,” he told NDTV. His four associates remain in prison.
Munawar Iqbal Faruqui was the face of the Indian dream. An example of how an individual’s economic circumstances and religion need never stand in the way of his ambition and skill. His dream is on hold, but the stand-up comic remains the face of his country—a place where dreams can quickly turn into nightmares.



https://time.com/5938047/munawar-iqbal-faruqui-comedian-india/

This is a lie.

The pathetic joke video is posted on this thread.
 
When The Time lets Sonia Falerio write an article like this, it leaves no doubt that this is nothing but agenda pushing by leftist media.
 
Humans created Gods. The Gods have become so powerful that they control everything. You cannot even criticize or make jokes on things that we ourselves made.
 
This message has been clearly transmitted and equally clearly received. Although members of Faruqui’s immediate family spoke to me over a period of two weeks they asked that I not publish their names. “You know what it’s like in India,” one said. “They go after wives and sisters, they say ‘we’ll rape them on the street.’”

https://time.com/5938047/munawar-iqbal-faruqui-comedian-india/

Animals.
 
Humans created Gods. The Gods have become so powerful that they control everything. You cannot even criticize or make jokes on things that we ourselves made.

Create your own god and mock him as much as you want. Just don't mock our Gods.
 
munawar-faruqui-comedian-1.jpg


Munawar Iqbal Faruqui was the face of the Indian dream. An example of how an individual’s economic circumstances and religion need never stand in the way of his ambition and skill. His dream is on hold, but the stand-up comic remains the face of his country—a place where dreams can quickly turn into nightmares.

Brutal.
 
Strict action must be taken on those so called comedians who claim to be hindus and make fun of our religious figures. It is time that the law takes its own course.
 
munawar-faruqui-comedian-1.jpg


Munawar Iqbal Faruqui was the face of the Indian dream. An example of how an individual’s economic circumstances and religion need never stand in the way of his ambition and skill. His dream is on hold, but the stand-up comic remains the face of his country—a place where dreams can quickly turn into nightmares.

Brutal.

Sonia Falerio, daughter of former congress MP and minister Eduardo Falerio is a neutral as you are.
 
Strict action must be taken on those so called comedians who claim to be hindus and make fun of our religious figures. It is time that the law takes its own course.

Can I make fun of pandits? Or is that off limits too, are they religious figures?
Can you explain the law?
 
munawar-faruqui-comedian-1.jpg


Munawar Iqbal Faruqui was the face of the Indian dream. An example of how an individual’s economic circumstances and religion need never stand in the way of his ambition and skill. His dream is on hold, but the stand-up comic remains the face of his country—a place where dreams can quickly turn into nightmares.

Brutal.

He should think before insulting others religion.
 
Everything done according to law. Took to police station, filed an FIR and then let the law take its own course. Not a single bone was broken in the process. And left loonies call this extremism.
 
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