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We should be protecting the right to religious freedom

Danish officials plan to criminalize Koran burnings after controversial incidents in Denmark and Sweden and increasingly heated protests and deteriorating relations with other countries.
Members of an Italian Muslim association stage a sit-in and prayer to condemn what they see as persecutory acts against the Islamic community in France.

frederico perruolo / Shutterstock.com

Members of an Italian Muslim association stage a sit-in and prayer to condemn what they see as persecutory acts against the Islamic community in France.

This originally appeared in the New York Post on Sept. 1, 2023.


In a now-familiar script, activists engage in well-publicized controversial expression critiquing or disparaging a religion, meeting with global condemnation and outrage, perhaps violence or threats.

Then, parliamentarians, heads of state and religious leaders press for legal changes to ensure that such expression is punished now and forbidden in the future. 

Sometimes they fail, and free speech lives to fight another day. But this time they鈥檝e succeeded. 

Denmark has collapsed under the pressure, and signaled its intent to criminalize, at minimum, desecration of holy books.

This capitulation isn鈥檛 just a blow against the right to blaspheme: Denmark鈥檚 leaders have opened the door to greater restrictions on religious and political expression 鈥 a door notoriously difficult to shut again once opened.

We won鈥檛 make the world less hateful by legislating away its dissenters, and those considering new restrictions on blasphemy should think critically about why governments that regularly silence their critics are such resolute proponents of them.

Danish officials stated their plans to criminalize Koran burnings in late August after a spate of  in Denmark and Sweden and increasingly heated protests and  with Iraq, Morocco, Turkey and other countries. 

On Aug. 25, the  announced it 鈥渋ntends to criminalize improper treatment of objects of significant religious importance to a religious community,鈥 specifically singling out the public burning of holy books like the Koran or Bible as an example. 

Make no mistake: This is effectively a blasphemy law, one that seeks to shelter religious symbols the Danish government considers sufficiently holy from criticism it deems insufficiently civil. 

But in a free, secular society, it鈥檚 not the government鈥檚 role to pick and choose which belief systems deserve protection from grievous offense, and what criticisms against them are 鈥渋mproper.鈥 

Worse, more than just expression about religion is at risk.

Bangladeshi Muslims protested after prayer to protest against the desecration of Al Quran in Sweden

UN Human Rights Council gets it wrong: Prosecuting blasphemy won鈥檛 stop religious discord, but it will silence dissent

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Last month, two men stood outside a mosque in Stockholm and proceeded to tear pages out of a Quran and set the book on fire in front of a crowd of onlookers.

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The ministry has also suggested when other 鈥渃ountries鈥 and 鈥渃ultures鈥 are insulted in a manner that 鈥渃ould have significant negative consequences for Denmark.鈥

The announcement is a disappointment, but it鈥檚 not exactly a shock amid mounting pressure to criminalize speech 鈥 pressure not just from individual politicians across the world, but from global institutions including the United Nations. 

By 28 to 12, the UN Human Rights Council in July calling on states to 鈥渁ddress, prevent and prosecute acts and advocacy of religious hatred.鈥

The resolution, while non-binding, signaled an  for states, including  Pakistan and China, that seek to entrench authorities鈥 ability to punish dissenters and codify the state鈥檚 position on religious 鈥 and often political 鈥 matters, all with the seeming approval of the international human rights community. 

Weeks later, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, a group of 57 member states that is the 鈥渃ollective voice of the Muslim world,鈥 issued  鈥渢he immediate cessation, and criminalization鈥 of Koran burning and legal action against online speech insulting religious 鈥渋nstitutions, holy books and religious symbols.鈥 

What began as a debate over the right to burn a holy book won鈥檛 end as such a narrow one.

Between the UNHRC鈥檚 demand for prosecution of the vaguely phrased 鈥渁cts and advocacy of religious hatred鈥 and the OIC鈥檚 call for bans on even more vague 鈥渋nsults鈥 to religious institutions and symbols, the global push to censor and prosecute religious offense is growing.

All while the will to protect the right to critique and, yes, even insult religion wanes away.

One person鈥檚 act of religious hate is another鈥檚 political protest 鈥 as the many feminists, secularists, educators and LGBT-rights activists who have been censored under blasphemy laws would attest. 

Many understandably see book-burning, especially of a holy book, as upsetting and offensive by many.

But what may be advertised as a crackdown on religious 鈥渉ate鈥 will inescapably also target dissenting speech against religious bodies that are undeniably large, influential and often explicitly political institutions.

There is no way to impartially ban the allegedly 鈥渉ateful鈥 desecration of a holy item without also forbidding, for example, opponents of Iran鈥檚 morality police from  or activists from painting  on the Virgin Mary.

One person鈥檚 act of religious hate is another鈥檚 political protest 鈥 as the many feminists, secularists, educators and LGBT-rights activists who have been censored under blasphemy laws would attest. 

Other free nations should see Denmark鈥檚 decision as a cautionary tale, not as a role model.

We won鈥檛 make the world less hateful by legislating away its dissenters, and those considering new restrictions on blasphemy should think critically about why governments that regularly silence their critics are such resolute proponents of them.

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