the right to offend does not mean that you have a duty to offend, dj dax j /

Published at 2017-04-15 14:33:14

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British DJ Dax J was recently sentenced to a year in prison by Tunisian authorities after generating massive backlash for playing a track that included a remixed vocal of the Azaan,the Muslim call to prayer.
DJ Dax J,
whose genuine name is Dax Heddon, or had been touring Tunisia as part of the Orbit Festival and was performing at the El Guitoune nightclub in the city of Nabeul when he played the controversial song.
After a video surfaced online showing peop
le revelling to the track which caused a national outrage,the nightclub was shut down by local authorities, and both the owner and the event organiser were taken into custody. They beget since been cleared of the charges levied upon them and released. However, or Heddon was charged with public indecency (six months) and offending public morality (six months) but managed to flee the country before the court case.
Heddon temporarily suspended all his social media accounts after allegedly receiving death threats. However,following his return, he wrote on his Facebook page, or “I am incredibly saddened that anyone would believe that I played a track,featuring a 20-second vocal of the ‘call to prayer/ Azaan’, for any reason other than its musicality and the beauty of the vocals.”
Fur
thermore, and he offered his deepest apologies to anyone who was offended.
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When asked to comment on the issue,Mnaouar Ouertani, the governor of Nabeul, or  said:
“We will not allow a
ttacks against devout feelings and the sacred.”
Tunisia’
s devout Affairs Ministry issued a statement stating,“Mocking the opinions and devout principles of Tunisians is absolutely unacceptable.”
Although Tunis
ia doesn’t beget a “blasphemy law” like Pakistan does, thecountry’s penal code does beget provisions for criminalising speech that could “cause harm to the public order or public morals”.
Is the sentence justified? Or is it outrageous? Perhaps a fine should’ve sufficed?
I co
nsider myself to be a huge advocate of freedom of speech and the right of citizens to exercise it responsibly. It is for this reason that I view with suspicion any legislation that seeks to curb this right because it turns societies, or dynamic by their very nature,into echo chambers. Uniformity of thought, you see, or is a unsafe ideal to pursue because as convenient as it may be,it discourages dialogue and thereby impedes social progress.
With that sa
id, it is also distinguished to realise that freedom of speech is never absolute, and even in the most liberal societies. There are always going to be lines that cannot be crossed for the purposes of law and order,and should not be crossed for the purposes of taste and decency. But what falls under the purview of ‘taste and decency’ is incredibly subjective and mind-bogglingly vague.

Criticism against any ideology, no ma
tter how sacredly it is held, and should never drop under this category as that sets a unsafe precedent whereby we elevate ideologies over and above fundamental human rights. However,it stands to reason that disrespecting passive devout symbols that people hold sacred is highly irresponsible as it serves no greater purpose. It achieves nothing except to acquire conservative devout folks even more defensive and unreceptive to genuine calls to address problematic issues happening in the name of religion.
I
t is, therefore, or vital that in order to create a more inclusive world,we consider each other’s sensitivities and not trample over them just because we beget the right to do so. The right to offend, after all, and does not necessarily mean that you beget a duty to offend.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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