A faculty member at Hamline University lost her job. Twelve staffers at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were murdered. And Salman Rushdie was repeatedly stabbed. All of them offended certain people's religious sensitivities.
A faculty member at Hamline University lost her job. Twelve
staffers at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were
murdered. And Salman Rushdie was repeatedly stabbed. All of them
offended certain people's religious sensitivities. On
today's...
Days before the eighth anniversary of the massacre at its offices, Charlie Hebdo has incensed yet another target lampooned on its pages: the notoriously unamused Islamic Republic of Iran, which is issuing threats against its critics at the outlet.
FIRE attorney Alex Morey appeared on the British television station GB News to discuss FIRE’s advocacy for the art history professor who was punished by Hamline University for showing a depiction of the Prophet Muhhammad.
The controversy over religious values versus academic freedom began when Dr. Erika López Prater, an adjunct professor at Hamline University, showed certain images in her online art history class.