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Written by E&P Staff, Editor and Publisher E&P Staff, Editor and Publisher
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Category: News News
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Published: 29 September 2008 29 September 2008
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Last Updated: 29 September 2008 29 September 2008
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Created: 29 September 2008 29 September 2008
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The Oregonian, like many other papers who had
previously distributed the DVD (almost all of them in "swing states),
carried an article explaining the move today. (E&P has chronicled
this phenomenon for over two weeks.)
The report by Bill Graves revealed that Fred Stickel,
publisher of The Oregonian, said the newspaper is treating the DVD as
it does other paid advertising or product inserts.
"I've always felt we have an obligation to keep our
advertising columns as open as possible," said Stickel, after viewing
the DVD. "Our acceptance of anything -- our acceptance or rejection --
does not depend on whether or not we agree with the content. . . .
There is a principle of freedom of speech involved here. I could find
no reason to reject this."
Only a handful of newspapers have refused to distribute it.
Stickel said The Oregonian does not disclose how much
the company is paid for advertising as a matter of policy. Here is an
excerpt from the article.
*
Masoud Kheirabadi, a Portland State University
professor who teaches about Islam, viewed "Obsession" at The
Oregonian's request, and concluded, "It is a bad piece of propaganda."
He said the work fails to provide historical context,
blurs lines between violent Muslim extremists and the vast majority of
Muslims, who oppose terrorism, and promotes division rather than
understanding.
Islam sees itself as the culmination of the Jewish and
Christian religious traditions -- not at odds with them, he said. But
the film says Islam teaches that it will destroy all other religions
through Islamic jihad fighters.
"This is hate-mongering," Kheirabadi said.
He says there's no basis for an estimate made in the
film by Daniel Pipes of the Middle East Forum, a think tank focused on
U.S. interests in the Middle East, that 10 to 15 percent of Muslims
worldwide support militant Islam.
More than 30 local community leaders, clergy members,
attorneys and groups, including Sho Dozono, past president of the
Portland Japanese American Citizen's League; David Leslie, executive
director of Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon; and Jan Abushakrah,
co-president of the Institute for Christian-Muslim Understanding, wrote
a letter to Stickel on Thursday asking the newspaper not to distribute
"Obsession."