ebsite has also been hacked with a message in English and
Turkish attacking the magazine.
The paper caused anger when it reprinted the Mohammed cartoons back
in 2007.
I had already read about the proposed guest editorship and thought it
seemed a rather crude idea, designed to provoke Muslims rather than
comment sharply or satirically on events in Tunisia. The editor’s claim
that the move was not intended to be provocative seems pretty
disingenuous. But clearly there is NO excuse for this violence.
Alan A adds:
Excepting the last sentence of Sarah’s post, I don’t think I could
disagree with her more.
Charlie Hebdo is a magazine which takes an equal opportunities
approach to offending people. It is anti-clerical and mercilessly takes
the piss out of politicians. Think: Private Eye, but with more shit. Its
cartoons are crude, and usually scatological. It is proudly secular, in
the great tradition of French secularism.
Frankly, to burn down Charlie Hebdo is a symbolic gesture: equivalent
to and as disgusting as burning down a mosque.
You’ll remember that back in 2007, a pathetic attempt by The Grand
Mosque, World Islamic League and Union of French Islamic
Organisations to bring a private prosecution against Charlie Hebdo for
criminal libel – for republishing the MoToons –
failed. Charlie Hebdo was fully supported in its defence by the Left
and the Right alike:
A lawyer acting for Charlie Hebdo read out a letter in the Paris court where the case is being heard from Mr Sarkozy, who noted that he is often targeted by the magazine’s cartoonists, but said he preferred “too many caricatures to an absence of caricature”.
…
The leader of the French Socialist Party, Francois Hollande, and a centre-right candidate in the country’s forthcoming presidential elections, Francois Bayrou, are also expected to testify on behalf of Charlie Hebdo.
…
Its first witness, Paris University philosopher Abdel Wahhab Meddeb said he laughed when he saw Charlie Hebdo’s cartoon. “I urge Muslims to adapt to Europe and not the other way around. That would be catastrophic,” he told the court.
“The trial against Charlie Hebdo is one of a different age,” the daily Le Monde wrote in an editorial. “In a secular state, no religion and no ideology is above the law. Where religion makes the law, one is close to totalitarianism.”
…
In opening arguments in the defamation trial today Mr Val defended publication of the cartoons, saying they were aimed “at ideas, not men”.
“If we no longer have the right to laugh at terrorists, what arms are citizens left with?” he added. “How is making fun of those who commit terrorist acts throwing oil on the fire?”
…
“What is sacred for a religion is sacred only for believers of that religion,” he told the court. “If we respected all the taboos of all religions, where would we be?”
That is the difference, I suppose, between Britain and France. In
France, all parts of the constitution stand up strongly for secularlism
and liberty. In Britain, we vex and fidget.
Was the decision to make Mohammed the editor of Charlie Hebdo for a
week “a rather crude idea, designed to provoke Muslims rather than
comment sharply or satirically on events in Tunisia”. No. It is very
clear that Ghannoushi’s Islamist party – very
far from the ‘moderate Islamists that they are claimed to be –
proposes to do precisely this with Tunisia. Islamists attempt to install
dead religious figures as political leaders. It is the perfect satire.
Tunisian secularists are rightly terrified for their future, and
Charlie Hebdo was right to show solidarity by ridiculing the politics of
the Tunisian far Right, in a manner that is fully in keeping with their
general editorial approach of 360 degree irreverence. Racists and
bigots, they most certainly are not.
The worst thing about the destruction of Charlie Hebdo, of course, is
that Mohammed will now be deprived of the opportunity of editing the
newspaper.
Also, read Andrew
Coates on the uniform reaction of the French Left – from hard to
soft – in defence of Charlie Hebdo:
The French Communist Daily L’Humanité, Editor Patrick Le Hyaric, said (Here), said “ceux qui brûlent des journaux, brûlent la liberté et la démocratie” – those who burn papers, burn freedom and democracy”.
We need a proper Left and a genuine Progressive politics in the
United Kingdom.
Sarah adds: I certainly don’t have any really
substantive disagreements with Alan’s addition, and would like to
clarify my position here. We should be able to mock and criticise all
religions, and any attack on that freedom should be resisted. I noted
my opposition to plans to outlaw religious defamation here,
and blogged about the issue here.
But although I don’t think we should allow violence to stop us
satirising or criticising any religion, I also don’t think we should
allow such actions to stop us attending (though we don’t have to, and
shouldn’t legislate to make it compulsory) to others’ sensitivities.
I can understand how the satire ‘works’ as a critique of Islamism –
yet I still thought it was rather crude, and perhaps more likely to
appeal to Islamophobes than Tunisian secularists. For me, that’s just
something to have a discussion about, and not a reason to prevent
publication, bomb the building, or in any way excuse such an attack, so
I’m sorry if my rather compressed pre-work post gave that impression
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