Muslims in Cartoons

The_Rabbit_25

New member
I'm interested in portrayals of Muslims in cartoons, not just as token background characters to make things more diverse or people who would probably be Muslim because of their geographic location, but as people actually practicing their faith. I know that portrayals of religion in general are rare in cartoons, but maybe we can find some examples.

Most of what you see is of the Arabian Nights stripe. What got me thinking about this thread was actually the 1994 television version of Arabian Nights that features Scooby Doo and Shaggy as the tale tellers. In one of their stories there's a gender swapped Aladdin, with Yogi and Boo Boo acting as her genies, who gets thrown in a prison with her prince. Things look pretty desperate, so she kneels down and a shaft of starlight comes through the window and she starts to pray.

That's not something you usually see in cartoons anyway, so I perk up and start to pay more attention and I notice that what she's offering is a Muslim prayer. Specifically she's loosely quoting verse 4.75 from the Quran, her version goes "Our Lord, rescue us from our oppressors, and raise for us from thee one who will protect, and raise for us from thee one who will help."

This is the version I found in an online English translation. It's from the chapter on women, chapter 4, verse 4.75.

[4.75] And what reason have you that you should not fight in the way of Allah and of the weak among the men and the women and the children, (of) those who say: Our Lord! cause us to go forth from this town, whose people are oppressors, and give us from Thee a guardian and give us from Thee a helper.

She finishes by telling the prince that "Allah is watching. He will guide me."

Anyway, I thought that was interesting. What portrayals of religious Muslims have you seen in cartoons? Are they positive or negative? Are more recent portrayals different than older ones?
 
There was Muhammad, the Last Prophet, which got a limited release in 2004 and was an animated retelling of Muhammad's life. Apparently, they got around the restriction that you can't show the prophet by making his point of view the audience's, akin to first-person shooter games, and by using a follower who is recounting the story to his daughter. I'd imagine there's lots of practicing Muslims in that movie.

Other than that, it's pretty clear that some of the Earth-bound settings in Cowboy Bebop: Knockin' on Heaven's Door are at least in a Muslim community, if not in a Muslim country. Nobody's actively practicing, though.

If you stretch a good bit, they do swear by Allah in Disney's Aladdin.
 
Probably the best recent example of this is Persepolis, or at least the most prominent one. It's all about a young Iranian girl struggling to retain her individuality in spite of the hardcore Islamic fundamentalism surrounding her back home. I still need to watch this movie, it's got to be one of the worst gaps in my animation-viewing experience.
 
Duh, Persepolis. How did I forget that one?



Actually, I don't think you do. I really didn't like the original comic book all that much, but thought the movie was brilliant. I find I like the original comic more after seeing the movie, but still think the movie is a better presentation of the material.
 
This thread is supposed to be all mine (i'm one of those geographical "muslims"), but to my shame i can't contribute that much.

Soviet cartoons aren't much of a help here with SU being an officially atheist state, though there are quite a lot of them based in Middle East or medieval Central Asia (which at that time culturally was the same thing).

Though i remember one particular cartoon, that was shown to us in turkish lyceum. About a boy who ended up alone on an inhabited island and after years sitting there alone and thinking about the world around him, somehow becomes a muslim.

From what little i remember it looked anime-ish, but i'm not sure if it was turkish or japanese made.
 
Let' not forget the Simpsons episode in which Bart befriends a muslim boy. An organisation for muslims living in America awarded the episode with some kind of prize, and the head of the organisation actually wrote Matt Groening a private "thank you"-letter for the episodes portrayal of muslims.
 
There was that episode of Captain Planet where a Jewish Israeli and Muslim Arab made peace with each other so they wouldn't destroy the world.
 
Back
Top