Nolan Finley
 Islam must turn other cheek
      	
		
		
	
	 	  How absurd is it that the deranged pastor of a tiny Florida church  can make the entire world hold its breath just by threatening to burn a  book? 
The Rev. Terry Jones of the Dove Outreach Center in  Gainesville is a hate-filled nut, for sure. But nothing he's done or  vowed to do in offering what can only be viewed rationally as a minor  insult to Islam merits the paranoia in the West about a worldwide wave  of bloodshed at the hands of offended radicals. 
Jones was  implored not to carry out his promise to burn a copy of the Quran by,  among others, the United Nations, the pope, Gen.general David Petraeus  and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. 
His back-and-forth  deliberating was covered as if it was another Bay of Pigs stand-off and  this scruffy preacher had his finger on the button. 
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  Come on. Jones should have been entirely  ignored. He's not an official of our government, nor is he a national  leader in any fashion. He's an obscure redneck, or at least he was until  the cameras showed up at his 50-member church. 
That Jones captured so much attention is an indication of what the West is up against in its effort to coexist with Islam. 
Yeah,  I know -- all Muslims aren't mayhem makers. But the lunatic fringe is  apparently wide enough to trigger an extreme overreaction from our  nation's top offices to a silly little publicity stunt. 
If Muslim  sensibilities are so tender they can't ignore the bizarre rants of an  insignificant American fanatic then this is a culture with a serious  anger management issue, and one the West can't help with. 
There's  no way to head-off every potential slight to Islam. Last time it was  Danish cartoons, this time it's a Pentecostal pew jumper who lays down  his snakes to strike a match. 
Tomorrow, an atheist in Italy may  name his dog Mohammad, or a biker in Australia will have a likeness of  the prophet tattooed on his backside. 
The only answer is for Islam to grow up. Religion invites antagonism; get used to it. 
Using  the destruction of a book as an excuse to rampage is unacceptable and  immature. A Quran, like a Bible, is a physical thing. What makes both  books holy are the ideas and inspiration they contain, not the pages and  ink. The religion won't be broken by taunts, or by bonfires. 
Burning  a Quran in the Florida swamps doesn't weaken the foundation of Islam  any more than burning an American flag in Pakistan dents our nation's  underpinnings, or coating an icon of the Virgin Mary with elephant poop,  like that "artist" once did in Cincinnati, undermines Christianity. 
Grown-ups  shrug off such affronts for the ignorance they are, and move on. They  don't go nuts, as the radicals did after the cartoon episode. 
We've  had the mantra "Islam is a religion of peace" drilled into us for the  past nine years. But Muslims still have some work to do to make that  case. Peaceful religions aren't so easily provoked to violence.  Religions of peace turn the other cheek.