Bacon desecration at Swedish university sparks outrage
"This is an act of vandalism targeted at Muslim students," writes Sweden's Linnaeus University. It was on this university's campus that a shocking incident occurred. Someone placed pieces of bacon between the pages of the Qur'an.
The scandalous incident at Linnaeus University in Sweden was reported by the sites P4 Kronoberg and sverigesradio.se.
The first person to discover the bacon in the Qur'ans was a student. He recorded the entire situation, and the video has already appeared online. "I couldn't believe my eyes," he said in an interview with P4 Kronoberg.
Pieces of bacon between the pages of the Qur'an
On Thursday afternoon, he and his friend were about to pray in the meditation room at the university. When they opened the cabinet to take out their prayer rugs, they smelled an unpleasant odour and then saw slices of bacon.
Linnaeus University claims that this is a serious violation of the law. It is emphasized as an act of vandalism, and such actions are classified as offensive.
There is no information yet on whether the perpetrator has been identified.
Let's note that a Muslim's diet is determined by the halal system, which distinguishes between categorically forbidden products and those that are permissible to consume. Forbidden products by faith include pork and its derivatives (gelatin, lard, skins, etc.), and the meat of scavengers and predatory animals.
A similar incident in Malta. They wanted to "avenge" the murdered priest
This is not the first such case reported by the media. A few years ago, a similar incident occurred in Malta.
Muslims who went to pray in the multi-denominational hall of the Mater Dei church were shocked when they found slices of pork (bacon) placed among the pages of several copies of the Qur'an.
There was also a printed A4 sheet with a photo of Father Jacques Hamel, murdered a few days earlier in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, near Rouen in France. The message on the paper read: "RIP Father Jacques Hamel, victim of Islam and its liberal/progressive apologists. A religion with blood on its hands cannot complain that its books are stained."