“Can’t they take a joke?” That’s the question that came up after the 2005 Danish cartoon controversy and now, again, after the massacre at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. The suspected killers obviously reflect a tiny minority of extreme religious fanatics, but the question made us wonder: What is the role of satire in the Muslim world?
First let’s establish that saying “the Muslim world” is like saying “the Christian world” or Africa: We’re talking one and a half billion people all over the globe — of different races, ethnicities and languages — who believe different things. That said, Duke University religion professor Bruce Lawrence does have an answer when you ask him about Muslim traditions of satire. He says, “I’ve been studying the Muslim world for I guess now almost half a century, and one of my heroes has always been a ninth-century literary figure called al-Jahiz.”
In a golden era for Islamic music, art and science, Jahiz studied everything from zoology to literary theory. He wrote merciless social satires, and he was also famously ugly. “He could satire himself as somebody who was very unattractive,” Lawrence says, “and yet he could make fun of the rock stars of his generation in Baghdad, which was the capital city of the Muslim world in that time.”
According to Lawrence, Jahiz remains a beloved figure in Islamic literature, and it’s not because he recorded the glories of Islam. “He poked fun at contemporaries, at his co-religionists, at anybody who seemed to him to have too great a sense of self-importance, whatever their station in life.”
A 13th-Century Andy Kaufman

That feels relevant to Azhar Usman, a Sunni stand-up comedian working in Chicago. Usman, whose family comes from India, says his comedy heroes are Richard Pryor, George Carlin and a 13th-century Sufi saint named Mullah Nasreddin. Usman says Nasreddin had “an Andy Kaufman type of personality.” He recalls a famous story about a time Nasreddin led Friday prayers. He asked the congregation, “How many of you know what I’m going to say?”