By Anne Applebaum
"Self-censorship out of fear" is how the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, described the decision. One of her allies accused a great cultural institution of "falling on its knees." The word "kowtow" was thrown around, along with "appeasement" and "cowardice" -- and all because the Deutsche Oper in Berlin canceled its production of Mozart's "Idomeneo" for fear that the avant-garde remake's final, unscripted scene (in which the king of Crete lugs onstage the severed heads of Jesus, Buddha, Poseidon and Muhammad) might offend Muslim sensibilities and create a security risk.
Apparently it's a lot easier for Germans to support the intellectual freedom of an opera director who proclaims himself "against organized religion" than it is to support the intellectual freedom of organized religion itself, particularly when violence is involved.
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