


PARIS — A French teacher hiding from Islamist death threats says he has been abandoned by the Education Ministry and has to arrange for his own safe houses when police bodyguards move him every two days.
Robert Redeker went underground after publishing an attack on Islam on Sept. 19, in which he called the Koran “a book of incredible violence” and Islam’s prophet Muhammad “a merciless warlord, a looter, a butcher of Jews and a polygamist.”
Islam, Mr. Redeker said, “exalts violence and hate.”
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said the threats against Mr. Redeker, who teaches philosophy in a suburban Toulouse high school, were intolerable and showed that “we live in a dangerous world that is often marked by intolerance.”
The threats came amid widespread criticism of Pope Benedict XVI by Muslims who accused him of implying in a speech that Islam was violent. And they coincided with the cancellation of a Mozart opera in Berlin out of fear of Muslim protests.
Speaking from an undisclosed location last week, Mr. Redeker, 52, said he felt alone and abandoned. “The Education Ministry has not deigned to contact me to ask if I need any help,” he said.
Mr. Redeker told Europe 1 radio he had no regrets and that asking critical questions was his job as a philosophy teacher.
French Muslim Council head Dalil Boubakeur denounced the threats and said: “Nobody can take the law into his own hands.”
Two large teachers unions issued statements supporting Mr. Redeker and free speech. One stressed it did so “even though we do not share his convictions.”
The press-watchdog group Reporters Without Borders said Mr. Redeker’s article may have been shocking, but added: “If Le Figaro had chosen not to publish this text … it would have been a defeat for the freedom of thought.”
Le Figaro is a major French newspaper.
Paris police undertook an investigation into a possible terrorist link behind the threats, judicial sources said.
In his article, Mr. Redeker also defended Benedict from Muslim critics outraged by a speech he gave on Sept. 12. The pope said his speech had been misunderstood.
Mr. Redeker said his wife was living in hiding with him under protection by police and the DST domestic intelligence agency.
“My security is assured, but the logistics are not,” he said. “I have to find myself a place to sleep at night or live for a day or two.”
View Entire StoryBy Mario Diaz
Left-coast judges rule Proposition 8 marriage backers driven by hostility

By Ralph Z. Hallow - The Washington Times
Bound by a common desire to deny President Obama a second term, restive activists gathering ...

By Ben Wolfgang and Tim Devaney - The Washington Times
President Obama keeps tossing ideas to curb rising college tuition costs against the wall in ...

By Derek Kravitz - Associated Press
Federal officials say a deal has been reached between states and the nation’s biggest mortgage ...
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

How does our 50th state view D.C. politics?

Great discoveries in the world of restaurants and chefs fulfill the quest for delicious food and cooking.

Despite cynicism about the law, it can provide you justice, protection, and ensure your rights. It can be exasperating, and at times, wildly entertaining.