‘Terror update:’ Controversial anti-ISIS coloring book featuring tortures hits stores
A US publishing company has chosen to teach children about the crimes of the Islamic State group in a coloring book. The company’s co-founder, who spoke to RT’s Gayane Chichakyan, believes the project is justified as it “tells the truth.”
  It’s not the first time the US publisher Really Big Coloring
  Books has addressed the issue of terrorism. Three years ago the
  company’s graphic 9/11 themed edition - "We Shall Never
  Forget 9/11: Kids' Book of Freedom" - ignited a firestorm of
  controversy, with some only arguing the topic was inappropriate
  for a coloring book, while others labeled it anti-Muslim
  propaganda.
  
  The coloring book is still on sale, as well as the equally
  controversial "The True Faces of Evil Global Terrorism"
  coloring book. Now both go with a supplement - "The Terror
  Update on Global Jihad," devoted to the Islamic State.
  
  One of the pages shows a crucified man and says: “Beheading,
  murdering, cutting in half the bodies of innocent men, women and
  children – this is what ISIS [now the Islamic State] wants to
  bring to America and its people. What are you going to do when
  they come for you?”
  Wayne Bell, co-founder of the publishing company does not see
  anything wrong in addressing this question to children.
  
  “Every day children, parents, teachers, educators hear the
  same exact news on TV,” he told RT’s Gayane Chichakyan.
  “What this book allows parents to do is to sit down with
  their child and explain to them exactly what’s going on. These
  are real images… these are real issues. The real horror here is
  the fact that there are terrorists that would murder you and
  everybody else in this country, because we do not believe in
  Allah.”

  Another page for coloring features five bearded faces, saying
  they are five Taliban prisoners released from Guantanamo in
  exchange for Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. Chichakyan noted thousands of
  Muslims would resemble those five and asked if the publisher
  wasn’t afraid the image could provoke religious hatred.
  
  Bell argued the sketches for coloring depicted real people, as
  was the crucified man in the book.
  
  “This is a real man that was hung in the street. All of the
  children that Friday afternoon had to go kick him in the tail… do
  you understand that? That man was crucified because he was
  Christian. This is a real man. This is on the United States
  website right now, the real image,” he said.
  
  Bell’s last argument in support of the comic book was that
  Americans “are not communist,” so parents can choose
  whether to buy the book or not. “You cannot determine what
  mothers and fathers will do in this country,” he said.
  
  Human rights groups have, meanwhile, described the anti-terrorist
  coloring books as not the best choice parents can make.
  
  The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) reacted to the
  9/11 book three years ago by saying in a statement that the book
  could lead children to believe all Muslims were their enemies.
  
  “America is full of these individuals and groups seeking to
  demonize Islam and marginalize Muslims and it's just a fact of
  life in the post-9/11 era,” Ibrahim Hooper, communications
  director of CAIR, said in the statement.












