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Coptic lawyer wants Egypt soap opera banned
By Khaled Diab
CAIRO, Dec 20, 2000 (Reuters) - An Egyptian
lawyer has sued to stop state television rebroadcasting a soap opera that has
touched a raw nerve by depicting the marriage of a Coptic Christian woman to a
Muslim man.
Coptic rights lawyer Mamdouh Nakhla's bid to
stop “Awan al-Ward” (Flowers in Bloom) comes too late to stop the current
screening of the series, which has transfixed Egyptians during the holy Muslim
month of Ramadan. But if he succeeds, the state broadcaster will be banned from
showing it again.
“I think it is offensive to the Coptic
community,” Nakhla told Reuters on Wednesday. “One of its central themes is the
marriage of a Muslim man to a Coptic woman, which it portrays in a way that
suggests it is commonplace, even though the Church rejects the notion of this
kind of marriage.”
Egypt's population of 65 million people is
predominantly Muslim but includes up to 10 million Coptic Christians.
The soap, broadcast on state television, tells the story of a couple trying to
find their kidnapped baby boy.
Although both his parents are Muslim, his
grandmother is a Copt who married into a Muslim family. The plot threw open the
possibility that the baby-snatcher could have been a conservative Christian or
Muslim relative of the child.
Egyptian media said Information Minister Safwat
al-Sherif had asked scriptwriter Wahid Hamed – known for courting controversy,
especially on religious issues – to write a special Ramadan serial that dealt
with the issue of national unity.
Egypt experienced its worst communal violence in decades last New Year when 21
people were killed in clashes between Copts and Muslims in a south Egyptian
village.
Some Egyptians have welcomed the television
series as a taboo-breaker.
“It's refreshing. It presents new ideas and
treats issues that most programmes would shy away from, like inter-religious
marriages and underhand practices such as bribery,” said Muslim office worker
Sabry.
But Christine, a Coptic marketing executive,
said the series was “over-the-top”. “It's offensive to both Muslims and
Christians because it handles the issues unrealistically,” she said.
ã Reuters Limited
2000.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.