I was on my walk yesterday morning when I first heard the
news of the murders at Charlie Hebdo,
the satirical weekly based in Paris. At time of writing, twelve people had died
in the act of terrorism, which targeted four of the main cartoonists, but
killed eight other journalists and two police officers as well. One of the
latter—wounded on the street—was finished off by gunman for no apparent reason.
Except that he could.
The newspaper has ridiculed politicians, religion,
business and anything and anyone else worthy of deflation. A lot of what they
publish is offensive to a lot of people, which of course is the job of satire. This
has been a particular burr under the saddle for Muslims, who have many
precedents when it comes to expressing their offendedness through violence. The
editors have had to defend themselves in court, and they’ve received death
threats and survived a firebombing a few years ago.
(Basically: "Flush all religions")
So far I’ve not heard of Opus Dei or Haredi operatives
being associated with such events, but the thugs with Kalashnikovs and masks
over their faces who literally shot their way into Charlie Hebdo’s office yesterday were heard to shout, “We have avenged the
Prophet.”
There’s been a global tsunami of response on social
media, most of it outraged by but some in support of the attack. I’ll let you
guess how that breaks out demographically. The graphics and cartoons hashtagged
#JeSuisCharlie have been passionate and heart-rending.
"Grab your weapons, comrades!" (Francisco Olea)
(Loïc Sécheresse)
"There is no freedom without freedom of the press" (Tomi Ungerer, who as a boy lived through the German occupation of Alsace, and thus knows from repression and terror.)
(A 2012 New Yorker cartoon)
And one that truly captures the ethos of Charlie Hebdo:
"Oh, no..not them..." (Tommy Dessine)
And one that truly captures the ethos of Charlie Hebdo:
"Oh, no..not them..." (Tommy Dessine)
There have also been spontaneous demonstrations of sorrow
and solidarity in cities around the world. Including Paris:
Berlin:
Strasbourg:
London:
Dublin:
Myself, I can’t seem to stop crying, because—aside from
the ghastly human loss of each of those lives—the attack on freedom of speech
and thought is downright anathema to any definition of civilization.
This is what happens when people have closed minds and
open access to weapons. It’s the triumph of the barbarians—in this case the
ones who want us all to return to those golden days of the 7th
Century.
As for the cry that we must respect religious
sensibilities, if your God is so utterly lacking a sense of humor and so
easily affronted that satire is somehow a capital offense, then s/he should not
have given humans a brain capable of critical thinking and articulate
expression.
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