UNC-Qur'an Controversy, Resources
Note that in some cases these articles, transcripts,
and sound files may no longer be archived at the URL's listed, or may require
registration or payment to retrieve.
Through personal experience, I am now discovering
in journalism "the good" (e.g. Ferreri, Cooperman, Jonsson, Shimron,
Hochberg, WURL, R&E Newsweekly), the mistaken (Braun, LA
Times) ,the ugly (David Van Bierma, Time Magazine), the
intellectually dishonest (Buckley, Bentley) of journalism, and the
vile (the Jerusalem Post, a formerly great newspaper now
devoted to the same kind of hate against Arabs and Muslims that
antisemitic writers in the Arab and Muslim press have leveled against
Jews). See examples and explanations below, as well as a list of as
many other major resources as I have been able to gather.
For one of the most extensive and professionally researched
newspaper treatment, see:
"A
Timely Subject -- and a Sore One: UNC Draws Fire, Lawsuit for
Assigning Book on Islam
The Washington Post, Alan Cooperman, Front Page (A01), 07 August
2002*
*Note: the online version of the articles have often
been posted one day before the print version has appeared.
For my Op-Ed response, which originally appeared in the Washington
Post and has been picked up by numerous other newspapers, with a wide
range of titles, none chosen by me, some more appropriate than
others, chosen by the editors, see:
Michael
Sells, "Understanding, Not Indoctrination," Op Ed, Washington
Post, 08 August 2002.
For one of the most the most detailed and in-depth discussions of
the issue, see the transcript of the "Interview
with Michael Sells," The Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, 21
August 2002, as well as the Religion and Ethics overview
page, "The
UNC Qur'an Controversy," and its linked pages to interviews with
UNC religious studes professor Carl Ernst and UNC Students.
Partial Bibliography and Resource List
- "UNC and the Koran" National Public Radio's Morning Edition.
29 May 2002.
Audio
report by NPRs Adam Hochberg on the Carolina Summer Reading
Program.
- "Sura
Reading, The University of North Carolina Makes the Koran Required
Reading for Incoming Freshmen," by Beth Henary, Weekly
Standard, 07/25/2002.
- *Note, This is a fine early treatment of
the controversy, but there was a mistake in the article that
the author, upon my communication, kindly corrected. The
statement in the article that the plaintiffs against UNC had
called me an "Islamist" (i.e. a proponent of the establishment
of Islamic religious law or shari`a as law of the nation), was
incorrect. The complaint called me an Islamicist (which I am)
but gave the bizarre definition of Islamicist as one who is
sympathetic to or subscribes to Islam.
This polemical definition of "Islamicist" in the complaint by
the plaintiffs against UNC allows for some thoughts on a rather
dangerous confusion of definitions. After several years of
terminological chaos, there is a growing consensus that the
term Islamist refers to those who wish a state governed by
Islamic religious law, and that the term Islamicist refers to
scholars of Islamic religion, Islamic civilization, and Islamic
history. Jerry Falwell actually did use the term Islamist to
refer to me. I am not an Islamist or a believer in any nation
state governed by religious law, whether that law be Dharmic,
Halakhic, Shari`a, or Christian-Biblical law, but rather a
state that respects all religious dispensations, but within the
rules based on civil rights and tolerance (no stoning of women
who have children out of wedlock, no infanticide against female
babies out of religious and cultural differential in valuation
of male and female, no prosecution of people on unanswerable
allegations of "blasphemy" or "disbelief," no "ethnic
cleansing" or religious apartheid, no forced divorces of those
accused of heresy, no denial of rights to those not considered
properly Jewish or Muslim by self-proclaimed truly orthodox
factions, no state persecution or discrimination against
pork-eaters, meat-eaters, homosexuals, caste-mixers (those
engaged in 'miscegenation') or others proscribed by the strict
legal codes of the Christian Bible, the Torah, the Hindu Dharma
Shastras, or the shari`a. All such forms of persecution should
be, to adapt a religious sanction to the view of a modern,
civil society, anathema. Is there a way of aligning halakhic,
shari`a, dharmic, or Christian-biblical standards with states
founded upon ideals of interreligious tolerance and upon the
criminalization of only those acts that directly harm
individuals in society: perhaps, with hard work and patience
and ongoing indefinite, careful political negotiation. Should
the majority faction in any society be allowed to impose its
own version upon the rest? No.
Definition of terms. "Muslim": one who subscribes to Islam.
"Islamophile": one who is sympathetic to Islam. "Islamophobe":
one who is antagonistic toward Islam. "Islamicist": a scholar
of Islamic religion, civilization, or history, as in
"Germanist," a scholar of Germanic society, civilization, and
history, or "botanist," a scholar of flora.
- Eric
Ferreri, "Author Weighs in on Book on Quran."
Originally published in the Chapel Hill Herald, Sunday,
July 28, 2002, final edition, page 1.
This article is precise and detailed. It
accurately portrays my words and the complex issues that are
intertwined within this controversy. In the case the
correspondent, Mr. Ferreri, is concerned primarily with converying
accurately the viewpoint of the author of the book at the center
of the debate. The result is a discussion that can proceed deeper
into the issues, guided by a writer whose questions constantly
move the discussion forward.
- FoxNews reports on pro-Islam requirement at UNC.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,53402,00.html.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,57205,00.html.
- University of North Carolina
Summer Reading Program, 2002 Home Page.
- The
Family Policy Network Home Page.
The
Family Policy Network on the UNC Assignment.
Statement
of The Family Policy Network's Principles.
http://headlines.agapepress.org/archive/12/202001d.asp.
- News & Observer article about Islam requirement
controversy:
http://newsobserver.com/news/triangle/story/1406152p-1440245c.html.
- WRAL-TV in Raleigh covers UNC/Islam controversy:
http://www.wral.com/news/1478767/detail.html.
- WURL
Boston NPR Show on the Controversy.
(The best and most carefully prepared radio discussion)
- A
Thoughtful Story on the Controversy from UNC Students
Another
News & Observer Story.
- University
sued over Islam reading assignment.
CNN, July 24, 2002 Posted: 12:17 AM EDT (0417 GMT).
- Michael Sells and Joe Glover debate the UNC controversy with
Hannity and Colmes, Fox News Channel, 26 July 2002, 9-10PM,
EST.
- Edgy
First College Assignment: Study the Koran, by Patrik Jonsson,
Special to The Christian Science Monitor, 30 July 2002.
Highly recommended.
- Clarence
Page of the Chicago Tribune.
- "A
Timely Subject -- and a Sore One: UNC Draws Fire, Lawsuit for
Assigning Book on Islam.
The Washington Post, Alan Cooperman, Front Page (A01), 07 August
2002.
- "U.S.
University Sued over Koran Class," BBC News World Edition, 07
August 2002.
- Michael
Sells, "Understanding, Not Indoctrination," Op Ed, Washington
Post. 08 August 2002.
This was not the title I had chosen for the piece.
The Same Op-Ed piece has been reprinted in many other newspapers,
with titles chosen not by the author, but by the individual
editors. See for example Newsday,
9 August, 2002, which gives my op-ed a
title ("The Qur'an is a Manual for Enlightenment") that makes a
claim I do not make in the op-ed piece and do not make in the
book. As a scholar of religions, I see constantly that what the
Qur'an, Bible, or other sacred texts teach can be enlightenment or
blindness, tolerance or persecution, openness or narrowness of
spirit, depending on who is interpreting these texts. The fact
that the editors would have changed my clearly stated position
shows how difficult it is for those, of whatever political
persuasion, to view religions without immediately jumping to a
generalized conclusion. I do claim that the passages I present are
among the more influential words in human history, that they have
constructive meanings for human beings related to issues of the
meaning of life and the need for justice, and that it is important
to understand how these texts are read and encountered by one
fifth of the world's population. I may have my own interpretation
of the Qur'an or Bible or Bhagavad Gita, but as I scholar, I don't
present my personal theologies, but rather attempt to elucidate
the literary and theological patterns in the texts, how the sacred
texts influence traditions, and the disagreements within
traditions on how to interpret these texts.
- "Book
in Dispute," USA Today, 11A, 09 August 2002.
Joe Glover, "Book
Fails to Tell the Whole Truth," USA Today, 11A, 09 August
2002.
Response: "Quest
for Knowledge Ignites Baseless Fight," USA Today, 11A, 09
August 2002.
In this point-counterpoint on the USA Today op-ed
page, Joe Glover of the Family Policy Network sets forth his
objections to the UNC assignmnet of Approaching the Qur'an and the
response article presents are defense of the assignment. Both
pieces are well-written and clearly articulated defenses of the
two respective positions, and the pieces together form a good
summary of the controversy at this stage in its
development.
- "Lawmakers
Move to Withhold Funds from from Koran Assignment," Washington
Post, 09 August 2002
- Charlie Warren Show, Interview with Michael Sells, ABC Radio,
Washington, D.C. 9-9:45PM, 09 August 2002.
- ABC Radio, San Francisco, Live Call-in, with Michael Sells as
featured guest, 10:00-11:00 PM, 09 August, 2002.
- A
Political Cartoon from the Herald Sun.
- Johnny
Gilbert, 06' UNCincoming freshman, "Americans Should Read Book on
Qur'an,"
Young Voices, Greensboro New & Record (One of the best
things written on the topic).
- "A
Kinder, Gentler Koran," David Van Biema, Time Magazine,
08/13/02.
A snide trivialization of the university, its opponents, the
author, the book, the topic, and the larger issue of religion,
education, and society.
- Interview with Michael Sells, WNYC radio, New York City, the
Brian Lehrer Show, 11:00 AM-12:00 hour, 13 August 2002.
- The
Portland Oregonian, 13 August 2002.
On publisher Stephen Scholl of White Cloud Press and his reactions
to the controversy
- Group
Challenges School over Quran, Newdays, William Holmes, Associated
Press, 14 August 2002.
- Ramadhan
Pohan, "Prof Michael A. Sells dan Kontroversi Kajian Alquran di
Kampus AS,"
Two Front Pages articles in the Jawa Post, August 15, 16,
2002.
- Judge
OK's UNC Students to Read Quran, Newsday,
Estes Thompson, Associated Press, 16 August 2002
- Raleigh
North Carolina Barnes and Noble Bookstore.
- "Rights
and the New Reality: No Blinders on Education," Los Angeles
Times, Editorial, 17 August 2002
- "Requirement
on Reading Koran Provokes Bitter Battle," Yonat Shimron,
Religion News Service, Los Angeles Times, 17 August
2002.
Excellent Coverage that brings out accurately the
difference positions taken in the debate. The article has appeared
in various other newspapers, under different titles. See "College
Quran Assignment Sparks Debate," By Yonat Shimron; Religion News
Service, The Times-Picayune, 17 August, 2002, p. 14, byline
Raleigh, 14 August 2002.
- PBS, Talk of the Nation, Thursday 15 August, 2002. Includes
interviews with Joe Glover of the Family Policy Network, Michael
Sells, and John Esposito.
- William
Buckley, "Aren't We Owed an Apology," National Review,
16 August 2002.
Citing no less an authority but Time
Magazine (see above), Buckley--like those in Cairo or Pakistan
howling condemnations of books they have not read but know are bad
based on sources similar in quality toTime, offers the
following: "The bowdlerizers at the University of North Carolina
have got out a special edition of the Koran (political
correctness: the Qur'an). The book, handed out to incoming
freshmen, is designed to communicate the teachings of the Prophet.
This edition is exorcised of any sentiments such as might have
impelled the knights of 9/11 to plunge themselves and their steeds
into live Americans, innocent of any infidelity to Islam, this
side of not adhering to it . . ."
Bowdlerization Balderdash.
Mr. Buckley's rage has left him both incapable of checking his
evidence and incapable of using the English language correctly.
Not only is Approaching the Qur'an: the Early Revelations
not a bowdlerization (Just because you can sling a five syllable
word, doesn't mean you are smart), it is not an "edition of the
Koran" at all. It is a translation and discussion of one section
of the Qur'an ("the early revelations or suras" as is indicated in
the title and made thoroughly clear in the introduction and
throughout the text). It never advertises itself as anything
other. Translations and commentaries on the Psalms or on
the Bhagavad Gita, of which there are hundreds in English,
are neither editions of the Bible or the Mahabharata (the larger
texts of which they are part) nor "bowdlerizations" of those
texts. It makes no claim about Islam as a whole.
We are indeed owed an apology for the verbal sloppiness that runs
through William Buckley's harangue. If Buckley, like his
book-condemning counterparts on the streets of Cairo, is too lazy
to look at--let along read--the book upon which he wishes to
propound, he might crib his information from a source more
reliable than Time. Buckley's remarks were echoed by
several of the editors of the Wall Street Journal editorial
page, one of whom, William Bentley, accused UNC of trying to prove
that "Muslims are not dangerous." Are Muslims dangerous? Are North
Carolinians dangerous? Some are, some aren't, and many in both
groups can be dangerous or not depending on circumstance. Those
legislator's in North Carolina proclaiming war against Islam and,
in effect, all Muslims are dangerous indeed, and the dangerous
element among Muslims can only applaud their efforts, and those of
Mr. Buckley and Mr. Bentley, to attack Islam and let their
fulminations echo around the Islamic world, further radicalizing
it -- just the knee jerk reaction that Bin Laden had hoped to
provoke. Fortunately, so far, most Americans are not ready to
match the Jihad of Islamic fanatics with a Crusade, but would
rather focus their response on those truly dangerous individuals
and groups within Islam that do indeed support a total war against
the West.
- Doug Johnson, Associated
Press, Chapel Hill, 19 August 2002,
"UNC Students Discuss Quran Primer."
- Required
Reading," New York Times Editorial, 19 August 2002.
- August 19, 2002 Monday 2:31 PM Eastern Time, "Court Won't Halt
UNC Quran Course," Bill Baskerville, Richmond, VA, AP.
- "UNC
Students Discuss Qur'an Text," New York Times, 19 August 2002,
AP.
- "Interview and listener call-in discussion with Michael
Sells," Jerry Agar Show, WPTF, 5:00PM-5:48PM
Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill, Monday 19 August 2002.
One of the more extensive radio call-in treatments. Excellent
show, well prepared, with a range of callers.
- "Students'
Reading of Koran is Upheld," Stephen Braun, staff writer,
Los Angeles Times, 20 August 2002.
This article contains serious errors. Here is a copy of the letter
of correction that I am sending to the Los Angeles Times.
- To the Editor:
I am writing to correct a significant mistake in the article
"Student Readings of Koran Text is Upheld" (20 August 2002).
The article describes the controversy over the University of
North Carolina's required summer reading of my book,
Approaching the Qur'an: the Early Revelations. The North
Carolina house of representatives has passed a bill prohibiting
UNC from assigning the book unless the assignment also treated
"all known religions." In my phone interview, I pointed out
that there are probably at least 500 known religions in the
world, and mentioned that I taught aspects of seven religious
traditions, including Igbo in West Africa and the Ojibwa
tradition of the American north plains. Concerning the "all
known religions" requirement, I remarked that "This is why we
don't want state legislatures setting the curriculum for state
educational institutions."
The article, however, mistakenly represented my comments as
follows: "'This is why you don't want state legislatures
controlling religious instruction,' Sells said. 'There are 500
known religions in the world.'"I would not never venture an
exact number of known religions because defining the boundaries
between some traditions are hard to draw--which is one of the
absurdities of the legislative language in question. I did not
use the term "religious instruction." Religious instruction is
offered by religious educators (such as sheikhs, ministers,
priests, rabbis, and gurus) in places of worship or religious
schools. Neither my book nor the UNC assignment involve
religious instruction. The distinction between learning about
religions and religious instruction (catechism), is absolutely
essential to discussions of the place of the study of religions
in public schools. If UNC had been engaged in "religious
instruction" I would have joined the lawsuit filed against
filed that was filed against the university on the grounds that
UNC violated the constitutional separation of church and
state.
- Live interview and call-in with Michael Sells, WUNC radio, 20
August 2002.
- "Interview
with Michael Sells," on PBS Religion & Ethics
Newsweekly. This is one of the most the most detailed and
in-depth discussions of the issue. It is a transcript of the 10 AM
Wednesday 21 August 2002, based on questions that break out some
of the more narrow parameters more common to the debate. The
Religion & Ethics Newsweekly also contain an excellent
general page, "The
UNC Qur'an Controversy," linked to a page of comments by UNC
students. Also included is an in-depth interview with UNC
religious studies professor Carl Ernst who recommended the book to
the selection committee.
- PBS Television Religion & Ethics Newsweekly Program
#551, a production of Thirteen/WNET New York, original ai date
23 August, 2002. The program includes a segment on the UNC
controversy, with interviews by Chancellor James Moeser, Professor
Carl Ernst, Family Policy Network president Terry Moffit, Michael
Sells, and group of UNC students. The interviews are short, edited
cuts from the longer interviews that are featured (in transcript
form) on the WEB site list immediately above. For an overview of
the series and a guide to the programs, see Religious
& Ethics Newsweekly, now one of the more substantive and
well-researched resource on religion available on U.S. network or
cable television.
- Discussion with Michael Sells of the UNC-Qur'an Controversy,
Interfaith Voices,
Program #24, interview with Maureen Fiedler, LS, 10:30AM, 20
August 2002, to be placed online on Saturday, 31 August 2002.
- "UNC
Students Begin Koran Course," BBC News World Edition, Tuesday 20
August 2002.
- "Required Reading," ABC
News Nightline with Ted Koppel, Wednesday 21 August 2002.
Includes short statements by UNC Chancellor James Moeser and
Michael Sells, and an interview-debate with John Esposito and
David Horowitz. For a response to Nightline by David Horowitz,
see: David Horowitz, "Ted
Koppel's Spin Zone: How Nightline Controls What You See," By
David Horowitz, FrontPageMagazine.com, August 23, 2002.
This show suffered from a poor decision by one of
the producers. It was advertised as a debate over the UNC
controversy raised by the socially conservative Christian group
The Family Policy Network. But rather than presenting a
spokesperson from the Family Policy Network or another critic with
the same perspective, it brought in David Horowitz, whose
complaint is with what he views as the liberal and anti-Israeli
bias in American academia in general, and in the Middle East
Studies Association (MESA), in particular. I have enormous report
for Mr. Koppel, many of whose programs, particularly on Mostar and
the Omarska and Trnopolje concentration camps, I have purchased as
models of journalism and as essential sources on the atrocities,
"ethnic cleansing," and genocide in Bosnia. But it appears one of
the producers (who evidently did not speak to me or let me know
what was going on) had an agenda more concerned with MESA than
with the UNC-controversy to which it related, but not in a direct
way.
- "Preparation
or Proselytizing? Reading the Koran and the Bible at
Carolina," by D.G. Martin, Mountain Xpress, 21 August 2002,
vol 9 no 3. An opinion piece by someone who really knows how to
write. By the way, Mountain
Xpress is one fine magazine.
- "To
Read the Koran," editorial, Washington Post, Thursday, 22
August 2002; Page A16.
- Live Interview with Michael Sells, on WPTF AM Radio,
Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill, 7:40 AM, 22 August 2002.
- Voice of America Interview with Judith Latham, Michael
Sells featured guest, 4:00-4:40 PM, 22 August 2002.
- CNN Sunday Morning, Live Interview and discussion with Michael
Sells, 11:40AM, 25 August 2002.
- "Sanitizing
Islam," Jerusalem Post, Editorial, 25 August 2002.
A specimen of hate discourse. The title sets the
tone. What needs to be sanitized: privies and infected areas. The
choice of the metaphor is a classic of hate speech: the people to
be dehumanized on account of their race, religion, or nationality,
are compared to something filthy or to an infection or cancer.
After this edifying opening, the column goes on to describe the
forthcoming atrocity in Nigeria, where Amina Lawal has been
sentenced to death by stoning by local "shari`a court"--an
atrocity that anyone with a heart, mind, and soul will condemn and
work to avert--as the essence of Islam and of Muslims generally.
This is the classic technique of hate speech: to pick out an
inhuman act committed in the name of a people and ascribe that act
to the people as a whole and to their essence, nature, or
unchangeable being. Of course, the same hate speech is leveled by
some Arabs and Muslims against Jews. Thus the 1982 atrocities and
crimes against humanity in the Shatila and Sabra refugee camps of
Beirut, for which Ariel Sharon was held responsible by his own
government's commission and for which he was condemned by human
rights organizations throughout the world, is now being used by
anti-Semites in the Arab world to imply that such cowardice and
inhumanity are attributes of Judaism or of Jews. Not surprisingly,
those charges are accompanied by the same metaphors for filth and
infection that are employed against Muslims in this editorial.
As a good friend of mine said, about such hate-mongering: they
should put the extremists from both sides in a cell and lock them
up together. Ironically, in the case of war-crimines in Bosnia,
extremists from both sides were locked up together at the Hague,
but it turned out that the Croat Catholic war criminals who had
butchered Serb civilians, and the Serb Orthodox war criminals, who
had committed similar atrocities against Croats, got along
famously in jail together. They even announced their mutual
friendship and solidarity. The lesson is that extremists are more
attached to their hate than they are to the people on whose behalf
they are allegedly outraged. If we put the editors of the
Jerusalem Post into the same room with the editors of those
newspapers publishing ant-Semitic hate literature, they would find
themselves liking each other very much indeed.
The Jersualem Post's Vision of Israel
"It is not that Israel is losing its soul. That happened a long
time ago. It seems now that it is losing its mind." This comment
was made by an Israeli friend of mine in reference to the demise
of the Jerusalem Post and what that demise symbolizes
Formerly an outstanding newspaper, with the best writers in Israel
writing for the paper, the Jerusalem Post was taken over by
Canadian mogul Conrad Black and turned into the moral and
intellectual debacle it has become. Israeli writers were fired in
favor of syndicated reviews and columns from elsewhere, mainly
North America. The Post fired its union printers and
replaced them with desperate Palestianians from Ramalla, who are
on the edge of starvation and who are forced to take whatever
crumbs a Conrad Black wishes to thrown their way. Israel as
envisioned by the Jerusalem Post of Conrad Black: a sense
of moral superiority, a virulently racist contempt for
Palestinians and for Muslims, use of classic union-busting
techniques, the turning of Palestinians into a permanent servant
class even as, with consummate moral superiority, more Palestinian
land is seized (for "security purposes") to make "prestige
apartments" for middle class American colonists at places like the
luxury settlementHar Homa, subsidized by heavy taxes on Israeli
citizens and guarded by a new Israeli permanent police-soldier
caste with the back of U.S. military, economic, and political
capital. There are other visions of Israel; such is the vision of
the Jerusalem Post.
OnLine Email Live Question
and Response, Islamonline, on the topic: "New Crusades:
Constructing the Muslim Enemy," 11:00AM--12:00Noon, Monday, 26
August 2002. Questions and answers remain online.
- "Islam's
Anguish," Boston Globe Editorial on UNC-Controversy and in the
West and in Islam, 29 August 2002.
- Michael Sells, "The Qur'an, Peace, and Religious Violence,"
open lecture, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 7:30 PM,
5 September 2002. Michael Sells discusses his book, Approaching
the Qur'an: the Early Revelations, in the context of the
current controversy over UNC's decision to assign the book for its
summer reading program. This 90-minute event was shown in full on
CSPAN2, "Book Events," Sunday, 8 September 2002 at 1:20 pm and
against on Monday, 9 September 02, at 1:20AM. For more information
about the segment, go to the following site at BookTV.
A videocassette is available of the program, both address and
question and answer discussion (time total 1:35), for $29.00
(Michael Sells receives no proceeds and no royalties from the
sale) from BookTV's
videotape site.
- Michael Sells speaks on the The Qur'an, UNC, and freedom of
speech at the Common Sense Foundation, Chapel Hill, 5:30-7:30pm, 6
September 02.
- Eric Hoover, "Unfaxed
(and Unconverted) by Book on Koran," Chronicle of Higher
Education, 6 September 2002.
An informative and witty look at the controversy,
which begins "In the end, the book that had proved so divisive
broughtstudents together in a circle.
On a Monday afternoon last month, officials and
professors at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill led
most ofthe college's 4,000 entering freshmen and transfer students
in discussions of a scholarly book about the Koran. The two-hour
seminars, of about 30 students each, took place after federal
courts rejected attempts by a Christian group to block the
discussions.
- Book Reading and book signing, Michael Sells, author of
Approaching the Qur'an: the Early Revelations. Quail Ridge
Bookstore, Raleigh, North Carolina, Saturday, 7 September 02,
10:00AM.
- Michael Sells, "Heart
of the Qur'an Belt," feature essay, on the UNC-Qur'an
controversy and Approaching the Qur'an, Religious
Studies News / SBL Edition, September 2002, vol. 3, number
9.
- Michael Sells, "Suing
the Qur'an," a reprint of the 8 August 2002 Washington Post
op-ed piece "Understanding, not Indoctrination," now under the
original title given by the author, special
September 11 issue, of The
American Muslim.
- Comedy Central, The Daily Show, 11 PM, Tuesday 9
October 2002, rebroadcast at 5:30 PM, Wednesday 10 October 2002.
Comedy Central's crack investigator probes
insidious happenings at the Madrasa known as the University of
North Carolina in Chap al-Hill, including an interview with
alleged Mulla, Caliph, and Grand Mufti Robert Kirkpatrick,
chairperson of the committee that selected Approaching the
Qur'an as the annual summer reading assignment, along with an
interview with a student on the infamous practice known as
al-l-night-aar, where students stay up all night writing,
talling, and reading subversive books. Kirkpatrick queried on the
alleged existence of 250,000 UNC al-umni spreading such
ideas around the world. Kirkpatrick responds, in a stern,
stentorial, and solemn voice: "There are no muftis
here."
- Michael Sells, Feature Interview with John Roberts, topic:
Misperceptions concerning the Qur'an, "Sunday Cover" segment, CBS
Evening News, Sunday, 13 October, 2002. For
transcripts or video, contact a transcript of this broadcast,
please call 1-800-777-TEXT. For a video copy, call 212-975-2547.
Make sure to verify the proper program: the interview was
originally scheduled for 6 October.
- Vicky
Lettmann, "The Suras of Carolina," under "Required Reading,"
Speakeasy, November 2002.
Updated 29 December 2002
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