Have you read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy? There's a scene where Arthur goes to the train station. He buys his ticket, a box of cookies, and a newspaper. He sits down across the table from another man who is waiting for the train and puts down his cookies and newspaper. He looks around the station for a minute, then back in front of him just in time to see the other guy open the box of cookies and eat one. Arthur is offended and completely upset about the guy eating one of his cookies, but he doesn't know how to deal with the situation--it'd be too impolite to confront the guy about it. So Arthur says nothing and eats one of the cookies himself. The two of them work through the box, each eating one cookie at a time. Shortly after the box is empty a train arrives. The other man gets up to get on the train. Arthur sits there fuming over the guy's rudeness for a few minutes, then picks up his newspaper. Underneath the newspaper is Arthur's box of cookies--he'd been eating the other guy's the whole time.
The scene is a few pages long and is probably my favorite part of the series. The reason I posted the picture above is because it reads very similarly to me; the picture story is written from the point of view of the Mormon, but it could have been written from the point of view of the Islamic man and had been an identical experience. Reading it, it feels like this must be an attempt to show how religious beliefs are mirrored no matter what the actual religion is.
The picture could be real, I suppose. If it is then that's an amazing lack of self-awareness from the person who wrote it.
Here's another thing it makes me think of: