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  • In January 2016, an Egyptian woman was sentenced to three years in prison for blasphemy after

  • criticizing an Islamic tradition on Facebook. Despite Egypt’s secular government, the

  • country has been cracking down on religious insults. So what other countries are enforcing

  • laws against blasphemy?

  • Well, by definition, blasphemy is any act that undermines God or the sacredness of religion.

  • It could be anything from drawing offensive cartoons or wearing improper clothes, to disrespecting

  • religious scripture. This idea can be traced back to all three Western religions, where

  • the act is not only condemned, but represented as a just cause for death. Consequently, these

  • passages have been used to justify capital punishment for Christians, Jews, and Muslims

  • for centuries. One of the most famous blasphemy cases was when the Supreme religious leader

  • of Iran issued a “fatwaororderto kill British-Indian Novelist Salman Rushdie.

  • Rushdie was accused of committing blasphemy in his 1988 book The Satanic Verses. The title

  • itself refers to the disputed legend that several of the Prophet Muhammad’s teachings

  • were mistakenly taken from the Devil.

  • According to a 2012 Pew Report, nearly a quarter of the world’s countries and territories

  • have anti-blasphemy laws, with punishments ranging from a fine to a death sentence. These

  • laws are most common in the Middle East and North Africa, where 70 percent of countries

  • still criminalize the act.

  • In general, those who commit blasphemy are arrested, charged and face prison time. However

  • in some countries, the offense is punishable by death. One example is Pakistan, which inherited

  • its anti-blasphemy laws from British rule, before the country gained independence in

  • 1947. The laws were strengthened in the 1980s, in an attempt to ostracize the country’s

  • non-Muslim community. Since then, over a thousand Pakistanis have been accused or convicted

  • of blasphemy, many of whom are Muslims themselves. In the country today, just one blasphemy accusation,

  • with little or no evidence, can lead to an arrest.

  • And, anti-blasphemy laws are not unique to Islamic governments. Secular nations like

  • Canada and New Zealand still outlaw blasphemous libel, which in their case, is any published

  • material that disrespects Christianity. And while the United States doesn’t have a federal

  • anti-blasphemy law, several states do. In Michigan, wilfully blaspheming the holy name

  • of God is actually a misdemeanor. However these laws are nearly impossible to enforce,

  • as the US constitution and the UN’s International Covenant on Civil Rights protect free speech.

  • In the end, many of the West’s outdated anti-blasphemy laws are pretty much dormant.

  • One such law in the Netherlands went unenforced for half a century before it was eventually

  • dissolved. But for many in the Middle East and North Africa, blasphemy carries enormous

  • weight, as offenders face life in prison, exile or death. And despite public opposition

  • in countries like Pakistan and Afghanistan, the abusive laws will likely live on.

  • Saudi Arabia is one country where committing blasphemy can get you executedpublicly.

  • You can learn more about Saudi Arabia’s controversial capital punishment in our video

  • at the top. As the Muslim population rapidly grows, so does the population of the religiously

  • unaffiliated. Check out our video at the bottom to find out how this will affect the future

  • of religion. Thanks for watching Seeker Daily! Don’t forget to like and subscribe for more

  • videos every day.

In January 2016, an Egyptian woman was sentenced to three years in prison for blasphemy after

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