The German Family Ministry is pushing to have a book it says slurs Judaism, Christianity and Islam labelled dangerous for children. The book's publisher says kids have a right to enlightenment.
The German Family Ministry is pushing for the
children's book How Do I Get to God, Asked the Small Piglet, by written by Michael Schmidt-Salomon and illustrated by Helge Nyncke, to be included on a list of literature considered dangerous for young people.
The three large religions
of the world, Christianity, Islam and Judaism, are slurred in the book, the ministry wrote in a December memo. The distinctive characteristics of each religion are made ridiculous.
The book tells the story of a piglet and a hedgehog,
who discover a poster attached to their house that says: If you do not know God, you are missing something!
This frightens them because they had never suspected at all that anything was missing in their lives. Thus they set out to look for
"God." Along the way they encounter a rabbi, a bishop and a mufti who are portrayed as insane, violent and continually at each other's throats.
The rabbi is drawn in the same way as the caricatures from the propaganda of 1930's Germany;
corkscrew curls, fanatical lights in his eyes, a set of predator's flashing teeth and hands like claws. He reacts to the animals by flying into a rage, yelling at them that God had set out to destroy all life on Earth at the time of Noah and chases them
away.
The mufti fares little better. While he greets both animals at first as a quiet man and invites them into his mosque, he soon changes into a ranting fanatic. He assembles a baying Islamic mob and holds the animals up in a clenched fist
while condemning them to everlasting damnation through bared teeth and an unruly-looking beard.
The bishop, a pale fat man with a clearly insinuated predilection for child abuse, makes up the unholy trinity which eventually convinces piglet and
hedgehog, after they have survived the long search in the maze of religions, that nothing of any importance has been missing from their lives.
I think that God doesn't even exist, the hedgehog says at the end of the book. And if He
does, than he definitely doesn't live in [a synagogue, cathedral or mosque].
Published in October 2007, the 20-page book's publisher, Alibri, said it was aware it was risking a political battle when it published the book.
Calling the
ministry's accusations an attack on freedom of expression, the publisher said the book answers the question of whether a nonreligious child is missing part of life from the perspective of secular humanism. Schedel added that the book is
intended for nonreligious parents looking to provide their children with a critical view of religion.
The German department responsible for reviewing children's literature is scheduled to discuss whether the book presents a danger to children's
upbringing in a March meeting.
Last month the German Family Ministry was said to be pushing to have a book it says slurs Judaism, Christianity and Islam labelled dangerous for children. The book's publisher says kids have a right to enlightenment.
The German Family
Ministry is pushing for the children's book How Do I Get to God, Asked the Small Piglet, by written by Michael Schmidt-Salomon and illustrated by Helge Nyncke, to be included on a list of literature considered dangerous for young people.
The three large religions of the world, Christianity, Islam and Judaism, are slurred in the book, the ministry wrote in a December memo. The distinctive characteristics of each religion are made ridiculous.
Anyway an English
translation of the book been made available as a free download (PDF file) . The accompanying images are also available to
view online .