Islamic Culture & Photo Blog – Muslim Blog

Sam Bacile’s ‘Innocence of Muslims’ Muhammad (PBUH), Filmmaker In Hiding After Protests

September 13th, 2012
by Sufia

The filmmaker who produced an incendiary, anti-Muslim movie that stirred extremists Tuesday to storm the U.S. embassy in Egypt and may be linked to the fatal attack on the U.S. ambassador in Libya may have gone into hiding, as doubts rose as to his true identity.

Following yesterday’s riots, a California man calling himself Sam Bacile took credit for making the film “Innocence of the Muslims” and identified himself as an Israeli Jew in two news interviews. In an interview with the Associated Press, he called Islam “a cancer.”

But a search of public records and inconsistencies in Bacile’s own accounts, as well as information from a radical Christian who helped produced the movie all suggest that “Sam Bacile” is a pseudonym and is not Israeli but an Arab Christian.

“I’ve met him twice. He is not a citizen of Israel. He is in hiding,” Steve Klein, a member of a far-right anti-Islamic Christian group who says he helped with the film’s production, told ABC News.

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Islamic Green Lantern introduced by DC Comics

September 6th, 2012
by Sufia

DC Comics introduced a new Green Lantern on Wednesday – a Muslim from Dearborn, Michigan, who leaves behind street racing to join an intergalactic police force.

Simon Baz, the muscular protagonist in his early 20s with the Arabic word for courage, “al-shuja’a,” tattooed on his arm, is the latest example of superhero diversity in the comic book world. His debut comes after DC unveiled a gay Green Lantern in June and Marvel Comics presented a half-black, half-Latino Spider-Man last year.

Islamic Green Lantern 0121 Islamic Green Lantern introduced by DC Comics

“In typical comic books there’s a big handsome white guy and that’s it. But that’s not the world we live in, and comics are reflecting that,” said Thor Parker of Midtown Comics in New York. Parker’s store was selling the new comic on Wednesday.

Most fans know the Green Lantern’s alter ego as Hal Jordan, who is Caucasian, a ladies’ man who was played by Ryan Reynolds in the 2011 film.

But the new comic tells the story of Baz, an American of Arab ancestry raised in a Muslim family. He is chosen to be part of the Green Lantern Corps, an intergalactic police force.

The original Green Lantern was introduced in 1940 with a character named Alan Scott. DC revived the Green Lantern in 1959 with Jordan.

The new story begins with Baz as a child watching television images of a burning World Trade Centre on September 11 2001. As an adult, Baz, with a criminal record for illegal street racing, turns to car theft after he loses his job at a car factory. A vehicle he tries to steal lands him in the middle of a terrorism investigation. Later on, he is magically bestowed with a ring that gives him superpowers and anoints him a Green Lantern.

Geoff Johns, who writes the series, said Baz’s character was part of an effort to diversify the universe of superheroes.

“There’s no real prominent Arab-American superheroes in DC at all,” Johns said, adding that Baz’s background also dovetailed with the superhero’s story.

“You are chosen to become a Green Lantern because you have the ability to overcome great fear, and I thought that would be a great [theme] to play with, with a character of this background,” he said.

The new comic is part of a collection released in September that tells the back story of famous DC characters. Baz will be the focus of several more comic books, Johns said, but he declined to say for how long.

The next Green Lantern comic will be released in October.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/