German Government Trying to Ban Agnostic Children's book

by GermanXJW 17 Replies latest jw friends

  • GermanXJW
    GermanXJW

    In October 2007, Author Michael-Schmidt Salomon and illustrator Helge Nyncke published the first German agnostic children's book "Can you tell me the way to God? asks the piglet".

    A piglet and a hedgehog live together in a house, enjoying life, One night, someone puts a poster to their house which states "Those who do not know God are missing something". The piglet and the hedgehog decide to find out what that means,

    They go to the temple mountain where a synagogue, a church, and a mosque are located, The two trutzseekers ask some naive questions and make the religious people very angry and quarrel with each other. But in the end, all are just men that look naked (withour their strange costumes) all the same. And the morale; those who do not know a god are not missing anything.

    Now, the German governmental Office for Family has filed a complaint to put it on a list of media banned to be sold to minors. The official reason is anti-semitism because the Rabbi is put in a negative light. It is even claimed that the rabbi is trying to kill the mufti with a scroll which is nonsense (see picture below).

    To me this is a scandal. The family minister is very religious and close the the churches. But in her office she ought to be neutral.

    There is a German page where you can also sign the supporters list: http://www.ferkelbuch.de/

    alt

    altalt

    altalt

  • mkr32208
    mkr32208

    The real scandal is a German government official worried about putting Jews in a bad light...

  • worldtraveller
    worldtraveller

    What MKR said! 6 million Jews and others put to death and they worry about a childrens book? I can assume and hope that this person is elected and will someday be thrown out on her butt.

    Everywhere we go, we now see attempts to take away our freedoms and choice.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Is the book available in english?

  • inkling
    inkling
    6 million Jews and others put to death and they worry about a childrens book?

    Excuse me?? "They" are mostly dead or dying. Modern German people can be no more
    blamed for what the Nazis did than a modern White American can be blamed for his
    great grandfather raping slaves.

    [ink]

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    bttt

  • cognizant dissident
    cognizant dissident

    Good point inkling.

    The illustrations in that book look hilarious. I would buy it. How come the German minister isn't worried about the Christian priest bonking the Muslim on the head with a Bible? Too funny!

    Cog

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    You can't criticise things jewish. But, jews have been analysing and criticising western societies for yrs, from their scholarly/media/psychological positions. Then, there is the ridicule in the form of 'comedy' or sitcoms: seinfield, the marx brothers, the 3 stooges, rodney dangerfield, borat, andrew dice clay, to name a few. A few more are listed @ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Jewish_comedians

    S

  • GermanXJW
    GermanXJW

    Anti-religious children’s book dangerous for young people, German ministry says

    Berlin, Feb 5, 2008 / 05:51 am (CNA).- The German Family Ministry is arguing that a children’s book for atheists that contains disparaging depictions of religious leaders is anti-Semitic and should be considered dangerous to young people, Deutsche Welle reports.

    The book “How do I get to God, Asked the Small Piglet,” written by Michael Schmidt-Salomon, features a piglet and a hedgehog. They discover a poster attached to their house reading, "If you do not know God, you are missing something!"

    The animals are frightened that they are missing something in their lives, and begin a search for God. On their journey they encounter a rabbi, a mufti, and a bishop.

    According to the ministry’s report, “In the book, the three great world religions Christianity, Islam and Judaism are scorned.” The ministry said, “The distinctive characteristics of each religion are ridiculed. Especially the Jewish faith is slurred by the portrayal and characterization of the rabbi.”

    The ministry says the book’s depiction of the rabbi is anti-Semitic.

    The depiction of the rabbi reportedly recalls anti-Jewish propaganda from the 1930s. The rabbi is drawn with corkscrew curls, fanatical eyes, predatory teeth, and hands like claws. He rages at the animals, yelling to them that God had set out to destroy all life on Earth at the time of Noah.

    The book insinuates that the pale, fat bishop is connected to child abuse and is constantly attacking the mufti.

    The mufti, after quietly greeting the animals and inviting them into his mosque, soon changes into a fanatic who gathers a shouting Islamic mob that holds up the animals and condemns them to damnation.

    At the end of the book, the hedgehog says, "I think that God doesn't even exist." Even if he existed, the character says, he doesn’t live in a synagogue, a cathedral, or a mosque.

    Gunnar Schedel, the head of the book’s publisher Alibri, said the publisher was aware the book could provoke controversy.

    "It's clear to me that putting a critique of religion in children's bedrooms is a hot political topic," Schedel said, according to Deutsche Welle.

    He said the book was intended for non-religious parents who want to provide their children with a critical view of religion.

    "All three religions are treated equally in the book," Schedel said. "No one is negatively singled out."

    Author Michael Schmidt-Salomon responded to the controversy on his website. “I don’t ridicule religions, they are ridiculous all by themselves,” he wrote, claiming children have a “right to enlightenment.” He denied that he was anti-Semitic, claiming he had been cursed and threatened because of his Jewish-sounding name.

    “So I claim the right for myself to openly criticize those Orthodox Jews, as well as fundamentalist Christians and Muslims, who are struck by divine madness. This naturally has nothing to do with anti-Semitism,” he wrote.

    The German department that reviews children’s literature is scheduled to discuss the book at a March meeting.

  • GermanXJW

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