[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 49 (Wednesday, April 6, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H2333]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FIRST AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Massachusetts (Mr. Frank) for 5 minutes.
Mr. FRANK of Massachusetts. Madam Speaker, earlier this year, an
irresponsible bigot burned a Koran in Florida. That was a despicable
act. But unfortunately, a number of far worse acts eventuated; that is,
the murder, calculated and deliberate murder, of a number of innocent
people in Afghanistan by people purporting to be defending their
religion against the burning of a book in Florida by massacring
innocent civilians in Afghanistan.
And I am pleased that people, including General Petraeus and others,
condemned the irresponsibility of the Koran burning, but there needs to
be even greater condemnation of the notion that that in any way
justifies murder. That includes a kind of condemnation, in my judgment,
of the President of Afghanistan, our increasingly unimpressive ally Mr.
Karzai, who, I believe, added to the furor there by insisting that the
man who burned the Koran should have been prosecuted. Well, under
American law, he was not prosecuted. He should not have been. The right
to do obnoxious things is a very important part of the First Amendment.
But what is most appalling is that people purported, in the name of
religion, then not even to do anything against that individual, and
that would have been unjustified. I am not suggesting that there is any
justification for any violence against him. But violence against people
in Afghanistan, employees of the United Nations there for humanitarian
reasons, other citizens of Western countries, for them to have been
assaulted and murdered by people purporting to be acting in the name of
religion, that is the true outrage.
And I hope people will resist any temptation even to equate the two.
An act of stupid and offensive bigotry against a book should be
criticized. Murder of innocent people in the name of a religion--and
it's particularly ironic that people who committed these murders claim
to be vindicating their religion. Indeed, no denigration of a religion
could be greater than to murder innocent people in its name. If I were
to be asked what did I think more detracted from the image of Islam,
this irresponsible publicity seeker in Florida burning a Koran or
people in the name of the religion murdering innocent people including
those who went to Afghanistan only to help, it is clearly the latter.
So, Madam Speaker, let's be very clear that nothing in what happened
with the burning of a Koran comes close to justifying the outrageous,
murderous behavior of people in Afghanistan. And I am pleased that
there is attention given to this, but the condemnation should be of
this kind of attack on innocent citizens, and we ought to keep this in
some perspective.
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