Bible and Quran Both Bloody, Humanists say
October 24, 2007
For Immediate Release
Contact: Roy Speckhardt (202) 238-9088, or (703) 314-7008
rspeckhardt@americanhumanist.org
- www.americanhumanist.org
(Washington, DC) Today Humanists reacted to the news that
several Oklahoma lawmakers refused to accept copies of the Quran, which were
offered as gifts from the Governor's Ethnic American Advisory Council. Even
though many had welcomed copies of the Bible that had been given them
earlier in the year, some were publicly sending back their Qurans.
"When government officials embrace the holy text of one religion and scoff
at the holy text of the next, it creates an appearance of religious
favoritism that abuses their public role," said Roy Speckhardt, executive
director of the American Humanist Association.
Lawmakers stated qualms about the violence depicted and advocated within the
Quran as justification for their disparate treatment; State Rep. Rex Duncan
announced that he refused his copy because the Quran advocated "killing
innocent women and children." However, when the Baptist General Convention
of Oklahoma gave copies of the Bible to Oklahoma lawmakers this past spring,
Rep. Duncan said of the gift, "It's one of the nicest things I've received
in my three years in the Legislature."
"It's remarkable how few holier-than-thou politicians have even read the
Bible that they claim to hold such faith in. Rep. Duncan would apparently be
surprised to learn that the violence he abhors in the Quran--particularly
violence against women and children--also appears throughout the Bible,"
continued Speckhardt.
Many passages in the Bible contain and advocate violence. For example,
Ezekiel 9:5-6 says: "And to the others he said in mine hearing, Go ye after
him through the city, and smite: let not your eye spare, neither have ye
pity: Slay utterly old and young, both maids, and little children, and
woman..." Several other passages likewise specifically depict the slaughter
of innocents. (See www.americanhumanist.org/press/Biblequotes.php for more
quotes. Also see www.americanhumanist.org/press/Quranquotes.php for quotes from the Quran.)
"It doesn't make sense to reject one text for violence when you embrace
another that's similarly bloody," concluded Speckhardt. "Humanists don't
take issue with assertions that the Quran contains violence--clearly it
does. But there's something dishonest in the rejection of the Quran for
violence while implicitly condoning the violence within the Bible. To do
this in their capacity as public servants amounts to an inappropriate bias
for one religion over another. To avoid this situation, public officials
should either accept similar holy texts out of respect for their
constituents, or reject them both."
Founded in 1941, the American Humanist Association is the oldest and largest
Humanist organization in the nation with over 100 local affiliates.
The AHA is dedicated to ensuring a voice for those with a positive
nontheistic outlook, based on reason and experience, which embraces
all of humanity.