The National - News

Hundreds gather for funeral of murdered Jordanian writer

- Suha Ma’ayeh Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

FUHEIS // Nahed Hattar, a Jordanian writer whose murder outside an Amman court sparked public outcry in Jordan, was laid to rest yesterday as hundreds of mourners gathered to bid him goodbye.

His brother, Majed, stood in front of the open wooden casket at a Catholic church in Fuheis, a predominan­tly Christian town near Amman. The building was packed with family members, friends, former officials and supporters. Many mourners were forced to sit outside.

Hattar, 56, an outspoken leftist and secular writer from a Christian family, was shot dead on Sunday as he arrived at court to face charges after sharing a cartoon on Facebook last month deemed offensive to Islam.

“Difference­s are discussed through a dialogue, not through bloodshed,” said the priest con- ducting the funeral. Hattar’s casket was draped with a threemetre-long Jordanian flag before family members carried it inside the church.

“His funeral was a national event and he was buried like a statesman,” said Saad Hattar, 55, a cousin. “I hope his death will be a wake-up call for the government to combat the radicals and their hate speech.”

Hattar was detained last month and charged with offending Islam, insulting religion and inciting sectarian strife and racism after he shared a cartoon on Facebook that depicted God and heaven. The cartoon was intended to lampoon how ISIL perceives the afterlife but sparked anger. Up until yesterday, Hattar’s family, who blame the government for his death, had refused to collect his body in protest. They accused the government of not providing Hattar with protection despite the fact he had received numerous death threats, and said prime minister Hani Mulki should never have ordered an investigat­ion into the writer’s sharing of the cartoon.

Hattar’s relatives agreed to collect his body three hours before the funeral, after the government agreed to go after those who had called for his death.

Known for his critical views on Jordanians of Palestinia­n origin and a staunch supporter of the Assad regime in Syria, Hattar was a controvers­ial figure even before sharing the cartoon and had many enemies.

Some of his relatives believe he was killed not because of the cartoon, but because he spoke openly against Jordan being an alternativ­e homeland for Palestinia­ns, as well as government corruption.

“He is a martyr,” said Mary Hattar, 58, a cousin who attended the funeral. “The caricature was only used as means to incite people against him. It was settling political scores.”

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