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Arabia
Teacher Charged With Mocking Religion Sentenced to Jail
2005-11-14
The controversial case of Muhammad Al-Harbi, a Saudi high school teacher accused of mocking religion, came to a surprising end on Saturday. Al-Harbi was sentenced to three years in prison and 750 lashes — 50 lashes per week for 15 weeks. The lashes are to be given in the public market in the town of Al-Bikeriya in Al-Qassim.

A number of 12th Grade students, along with some teachers from the same school, filed a lawsuit a year-and-a-half ago against Al-Harbi. He was accused of mocking Islam, favoring Jews and Christians, preventing students from performing ablutions. He was also charged with studying witchcraft. At the time, he was a chemistry teacher at Al-Fowailiq High School in the town of Ein Al-Juwa in Al-Qassim. “This is a very cruel sentence,” Al-Harbi told Arab News. He explained over the phone that the students who filed the lawsuit had failed the monthly chemistry test. “They asked me to give them the exam again and when I refused, they went to the principal to complain but he upheld my decision,” he explained.

According to Al-Harbi, the students’ actions were triggered by some Islamic studies teachers who used the students’ anger at Al-Harbi and convinced them to file the lawsuit. The reason for the Islamic studies teachers action has its roots five years ago when Al-Harbi joined the staff of Al-Fowailiq High School after graduating from King Saud University in Riyadh. Based on his academic record and extracurricular activities, the school principal appointed Al-Harbi as school activities organizer. Deeply disturbed by the explosions at the Al-Hamra Compound in Riyadh in 2003, Al-Harbi felt it his duty as an educator to enlighten his students and warn them of terrorism and its consequences. He went to great lengths by talking to students, hanging anti-terrorism signs around the school and speaking against terrorism. “The Ministry of Education has recently ordered all schools to lecture students on the dangers of extremism and terrorism in general, but I was a step ahead of their decision,” said Al-Harbi.

Apparently Al-Harbi’s actions and comments against terrorism upset a number of Islamic studies teachers known for their fundamentalist beliefs. After the Al-Hamra blast in Riyadh, Al-Harbi copied an article, “Cavemen Go to Hell” written by Saudi columnist Hammad Al-Salmi in Al-Jazirah newspaper, attacking terrorists and extremists. Al-Harbi posted the article on the school bulletin board but it was ripped off and torn to pieces. The teachers, as one of the students’ fathers admitted to Al-Harbi, used to visit students in their homes, encouraging them to disobey Al-Harbi and calling him names. One of the Islamic studies teachers stopped Al-Harbi in a morning school assembly from speaking against Abdul Aziz Al-Muqrin, identified by the Saudi government as a terrorist and who was on the government’s list of wanted terrorists. The teacher told Al-Harbi that Al-Muqrin was a Muslim and that no matter what he had done, no one should speak against him. “They told the students that I studied under secular teachers and thus I’m not to be trusted in any subject except for chemistry,” said Al-Harbi.
Posted by:Fred

#14  The Religious Policeman weighs in.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-11-14 17:01  

#13  One man in all of Soddiland took a stand for decency and tried to teach the yoots to steer away from the rocky shoals of extremism.

His reward is to have his skin flayed from his body in super slo-mo


I have shivers just thinking in what the Saudi penal system would do to people involved in terrorism. /tongue_in_cheek_off.
Posted by: JFM   2005-11-14 16:05  

#12  He was also charged with studying witchcraft. (and had a poster in his house?)



Honestly, the Saudi religious police have to find another outlet for their repressed fetishes than beating some poor dumdum to a pulp.
Posted by: BigEd   2005-11-14 15:13  

#11  What century are we in?
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-11-14 15:11  

#10  I doubt he'll feel very lucky by Week 7 or so. He is meant to be a very messy, unmistakable object lesson to the rest of Soddiland...do not stray from the True Path of Allan and his chosen messengers.

Or else.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-11-14 15:03  

#9  No separation between church and state. No freedom of speech. We are talking 7th century attitudes. Al-Harbi was a brave man--lucky he didn't get executed.
Posted by: ScopesMonkey   2005-11-14 12:35  

#8  When I saw the headline I knew immediately just what religion we were talking about.
Posted by: Cheaderhead   2005-11-14 11:02  

#7  A number of 12th Grade students, along with some teachers from the same school, filed a lawsuit a year-and-a-half ago against Al-Harbi. He was accused of mocking Islam, favoring Jews and Christians, preventing students from performing ablutions.

Shoulda given us the "A" like we told ya, Mr. Kot-tair.
Posted by: BH   2005-11-14 10:29  

#6  When I read the headline, I was sure it had happened here, in George Bush's Amerikkka, where the American Taliban of Christian fundamentalism has seized power in a bloodless coup ... /moonbat
Posted by: docob   2005-11-14 08:36  

#5  Doh!

The question we *conservatives* should ....
Posted by: The Happy Fliegerabwehrkanonen   2005-11-14 08:09  

#4  #3 He was also charged with studying witchcraft.

How many countries still have laws against "witchcraft" on their books?

In how many countries are such accusations taken seriously?

How many of those countries are Muslim?

************

The question we conservative should be asking is when, ole lord, when are we going to have a real Reagan-like conservative in the White House who has the stones to call out Saudi Arabia (and Pakland for good measure) as the source of evil in the world today? Soodie should have been reduced to rubble yesterday; well, save of Mecca and Medina, but as for the rest of the country, it should resemble Carthage after the Third Punic War.
Posted by: The Happy Fliegerabwehrkanonen   2005-11-14 08:08  

#3  He was also charged with studying witchcraft.

How many countries still have laws against "witchcraft" on their books?

In how many countries are such accusations taken seriously?

How many of those countries are Muslim?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-11-14 07:53  

#2  Just like in Pakland, charges of blasphemy and apostasy are thin pretexts used to settle petty feuds, personal disputes, and enforce general orthodoxy. This is totalitarianism pure and simple. A teacher denounced by his students, encouraged by the local commisars and arrested by the state.

Why is it so hard in these cultures to stand up to the mullah mafiosos? The ones who wave the Koran and shout the loudest get their way without fail.

If the State Dept. and Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are not all campaigning for Al-Harbi within the next week, then they deserve to be disbanded. If Bush doesn't say anything, then he is lilly-livered and no better than Kerry.
Posted by: Monsieur Moonbat   2005-11-14 02:34  

#1  This is dreadful. One man in all of Soddiland took a stand for decency and tried to teach the yoots to steer away from the rocky shoals of extremism.

His reward is to have his skin flayed from his body in super slo-mo. I imagine they'll find a way to keep him alive for all fifteen of those agonizing weeks, then arrange for some "accident" in the prison so they won't have the opportunity to pardon him in time for the next Ramadan.

A sad salute to you, Mr. al-Harbi. I'd like to nominate you for the Rantburg Profiles in Courage. The entire world should be told what price one man is paying because he challenged the Wahhabs.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-11-14 00:57  

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