Bosch Fawstin (born July 31, 1970)[1][2] is an American cartoonist and anti-Islam[3] activist who is known for drawing the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Born a Muslim, his parents came from Albania. Fawstin left the religion and now describes himself as a "radical critic of Islam".[4] He won a controversial Muhammad cartoon contest in 2015 that saw the Curtis Culwell Center attack take place.[5]
Early and personal life
Fawstin was born and raised in the Bronx, New York City by Albanian Muslim parents.[6] He says he "phased out of Islam" in his mid-teens when he "began to think about morality in a serious way [and] saw the contrast between Islamic values and American values",[6] and that the September 11 attacks later was a turning point for him.[7] He has also cited the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy as a strong influence of his views in "defense of free speech".[4] After leaving Islam, he has identified as an atheist,[7] and embraced Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism.[8] He began taking night classes at the School of Visual Arts New York City when he was 25 in order to pursue a career of making comic books.[9]
Fawstin first began drawing Muhammad after the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy in 2006, then after Molly Norris was forced into hiding for announcing the "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day" in 2010, again after the offices of Charlie Hebdo were firebombed in 2011, and following the Charlie Hebdomassacre in 2015, which led to the 2015 Muhammad cartoon contest.[8]
In 2015, he won a controversial contest hosted by the American Freedom Defense Initiative, advertised as the "First Annual Muhammad Art Exhibit and Contest" featuring drawings of Muhammad. The event saw the Curtis Culwell Center attack by two armed Islamist terrorists take place, claimed as the first attack by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the United States.[12] Both attackers were killed by SWAT officers. Fawstin stated that he had received death threats for his cartoons before then, but denied reports in The Wall Street Journal that he went into hiding following the attack.[5][13]
Fawstin also published the semi-biographical The Infidel, featuring Pigman, a three-part comic book that is part of a graphic novel. The plot "revolves around twin brothers who react to 9/11 in opposite ways: One dives deeper into his Islamic roots; the other, a Muslim apostate, creates 'an ex-Muslim counter-jihad superhero comic book.' It is a story within a story: As the superhero, Pigman, battles his jihadist nemesis, the conflict between the twins escalates."[6][9][14] He was interviewed on The Daily Show in 2011 regarding his criticism of comic book character Nightrunner, while also featuring his own comic.[15][16]
He appeared in two documentary films about free speech in 2016 and 2017—Silenced: Our War on Free Speech produced by Mike Cernovich,[22] and Can’t We Talk About This directed by Pamela Geller.[23] In 2018, he was announced as the judge of a Muhammad cartoon contest to be hosted by Dutch politician Geert Wilders.[24] The contest was eventually cancelled over safety concerns,[25] but held the next year.[26]
He published the two-volume Peaceful Death Threats in 2019, which compiled some of the thousands of death threats he has received from Muslims.[27]
In 2020, he illustrated a Danish book about the Quran titled De skyggefulde haver by Kåre Bluitgen, as it was no longer possible to find any cartoonist willing to draw Muhammad in Denmark.[28] The book was billed as the "first illustrated Quran in the world".[29]
Fawstin stated to have drawn Muhammad over three hundred times by 2020.[8]
ProPiganda: Drawing the Line Against Jihad. O'Ink Comics. 2009. ISBN978-0974955810.
The Infidel, featuring Pigman #1: The Trigger. O'Ink Comics. 2011. ASINB015YJ0AD8.
The Infidel, featuring Pigman #2: War of Words. O'Ink Comics. 2013. ASINB015ZZEZH8.
Robinson, Cary; Fawstin, Bosch (illustrator) (2014). Monsters In My Yard. Golden Hound. ISBN978-0989060042.
The Infidel, featuring Pigman #3: Reprisal. O'Ink Comics. 2015. ASINB0160CE03Y.
My Mohammad Cartoons. Vol. 1–2. O'Ink Comics. 2018–19.
Peaceful Death Threats. Vol. 1–2. O'Ink Comics. 2019.
Islam Bitches. O'Ink Comics. 2019.
Bluitgen, Kåre; Fawstin, Bosch (illustrator) (2020). De skyggefulde haver (in Danish). Forlaget Tøkk. ISBN978-8793141636.
Infidel, P. R.; Fawstin, Bosch (illustrator) (2022). Tales of American Idiocy. Liberty Hill. ISBN978-1662860737.
References
^"Bosch Fawstin". Comiclopedia. Lambiek. January 18, 2008. Archived from the original on November 17, 2023.
^"Bosch Fawstin". Twitter. Archived from the original on January 6, 2025. Retrieved August 21, 2024. Born July 31
^Glatfelter, Jon (May 26, 2015). ""That's Why I Draw You": An Interview with Bosch Fawstin". The Undercurrent. Archived from the original on November 12, 2024. The Undercurrent: Are you anti-Muslim? Fawstin: No. I am anti-Islam. Islam is a totalitarian ideology, and Muslims are human beings who may or may not represent the religion they profess to uphold.