Meanwhile, as the controversy grew, the rhetoric from school administrators and activist students transformed the incident in the art class into a repugnant assault on Muslim students. A November 7 mass email from the school’s “vice president for inclusive excellence” called it “undeniably inconsiderate, disrespectful and Islamophobic,” while a November 18 editorial in the Hamline student paper, the Oracle, classified it as an incident of “hate and discrimination.” Nur Mood, Hamline’s assistant director of social justice programs and adviser to the campus MSA, told the Oracle, “It’s something that in a million years, I never expected that it would happen here at Hamline. I hope this is the last time I see something similar to this.… There’s a lot of apologies all happening, but the harm’s done.” He also proposed mandatory training on Islamophobia for all faculty. Seemingly the only concession was that the school concluded that López Prater’s actions amounted merely to “an act of intolerance” rather than an actual hate crime.
A “Community Conversation” held in response to the controversy on December 8 turned out to be entirely one-sided. All the panelists apparently took it for granted that the showing of the Muhammad image was disrespectful, offensive, and racist—indeed, an example of pervasive racism at Hamline, where many Muslim students are black. Wedatalla, who apparently never explained why she disregarded both the advance warning about images of Muhammad being used during the semester and the specific warning during the class session, talked tearfully about feeling hurt, excluded, and disrespected. The forum was led by Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the most prominent Muslim civil rights group. Hussein flatly asserted that the school “cannot have incidents like this happen” if it wants to show that it values Muslim and nonwhite students.
One faculty member who attended that campus event, religion professor Mark Berkson, did try to object—pointing out, among other things, that there is no consensus in Islam on depictions of Muhammad and that “there are many Muslim scholars and experts and art historians who do not believe that this was Islamophobic.” He says that two university officials approached him to discourage him from speaking. In reply, Hussein suggested that scholars who don’t find the image offensive are marginal cranks, similar to someone who would “teach a whole class about why Hitler was good.”
And there’s another egregious twist the Times article doesn’t mention. A long letter from Berkson defending López Prater and the showing of Muhammad images in academic settings, published in the Oracle on December 6, was disappeared two days later. A subsequent staff editorial noting the letter’s removal and titled “Journalism, minimizing harm and trauma” explained that, while the paper’s editors, all undergraduates, were in favor of “having conversations in the open,” they would not “participate in conversations where a person must defend their lived experience and trauma as topics of discussion or debate.” The editorial repeatedly stressed that “trauma and lived experiences are not open for debate” and that the publication’s only job with regard to such accounts is to provide supportive and respectful listening. Attorney and blogger Ken White, who is generally skeptical of “cancel culture” complaints but finds the Hamline saga appalling, has commented that the editorial reads like “a mean-spirited, excessive satire of college students from some far-right site.”
Granted, the newspaper’s editor-in-chief told UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh that the Berkson letter was taken down because it was posted during finals week when people had little opportunity to respond and promised that it would be put back online “at some point.” But Volokh clearly isn’t holding his breath: He posted the text of the spiked letter on his own blog.
Many people dismayed by López Prater’s firing and more generally by the controversy at Hamline point out that—as López Prater argued—there is no consensus in Muslim cultures on images of Muhammad and that there is a long history of such depictions in Islamic art. (Christiane Gruber, a professor of Islamic art at the University of Michigan, has an excellent essay on the subject in New Lines magazine.) But the issue is bigger than that. Surely religious taboos, of whatever religion, should not govern the display of images in an academic setting with the exception of religious schools.
Several Islamic art scholars who spoke to the New York Times said that they would draw a distinction between the reverential painting shown by López Prater and “mocking cartoons” of Muhammad such as the ones printed in the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. Fair enough. But it should be a given that a professor teaching modern controversies over free speech, for example, can display the Charlie Hebdo cartoons, or the earlier Muhammad cartoons printed in the Danish weekly Jyllands-Posten, without being accused of “hate”—though advance warning may be appropriate. Whether the Charlie Hebdo cartoons were bigoted is another debate; but surely there are times when even truly vile racist, antisemitic, misogynistic, or otherwise hateful images can and should be included in a course curriculum (in a class of the history of Nazi Germany or of white supremacism in America, for example). The default assumption should be that adults, even young adults, can handle such images even if they are profoundly offensive. To think otherwise is profoundly infantilizing.
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