The
Parisian satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo will appear on schedule on Wednesday,
even though half of its editorial team were killed by Islamists last week. It's
a triumph for press freedom - and laughter.
Deutsche Welle, 14 Jan 2015
If the
Islamist terrorists meant to silence Charlie Hebdo by killing 12 people in its
offices, they failed. In fact, quite the opposite: the satirical magazine has
hit the market with three million copies: 50 times as large a circulation as
before the attack. The prophet Muhammad, whose depiction conservative Muslims
consider offensive, is on the cover. Charlie Hebdo, which has traditionally
lampooned various religions, will be translated into various languages,
including Arabic.
Staying
funny
The
surviving editors and cartoonists began working on the new edition two days
after the attack. The whole of France was waiting for Charlie Hebdo, because
its punctual appearance would be a signal to show that press freedom is
stronger than terrorism.
'It's a completely normal issue,' said editor Gerard Biard |
The right
to blasphemy must be defended, editor Gerard Biard said. "Of course we
want this to be a funny issue. We'll make you laugh, because we can't do
anything else. That says that they didn't kill Charlie," said Biard after
the editorial meeting, which French Prime Minister Manuel Valls also attended.
'I had to
cry'
The cover
of the new issue shows the prophet Muhammad crying and holding up the "Je
suis Charlie" sign that has become a symbol of resistance to the violence
in the past few days. Above Muhammad, the headline reads, "All is
forgiven." Even the prophet is crying over what the terrorists did, is how
cartoonist Luz explained his idea. "There was this idea of 'Je suis
Charlie,' and I drew a crying Muhammad. Then I wrote 'All is forgiven,' and I
had to cry myself. And then the cover was finished!"
Luz said
that the team had to work hard to get the magazine ready in time. There wasn't
much time to mourn. It felt, he said, as though their dead friends were still
there. Biard said that material and ideas of those killed was also used.
"No one was dead in this issue," he said. "They're still here.
They'll be in this issue, because they were always with us."
This issue
has only eight pages, rather than the usual 16, but it consists of the same mix
of comic strips and biting texts. The attacks and terrorism are the main
themes, but the issue is completely normal, insists Biard. "It's not a
memorial issue. There are no obituaries. We do what we always do on
Wednesdays."
Working
under police protection
The new cover could offend some Muslims |
The
editorial team found space to work at the daily newspaper Liberation. Other
media outlets donated computers and other equipment. "They didn't have
anything. The bloody pencils and laptops are sealed off at the crime
scene," said Pierre Fraididenraich of Liberation. The newspaper's
building, printers, and distribution center are all heavily guarded by police.
There is real fear of another attack.
The French
government intends to donate a million euros ($1.2 million) to Charlie Hebdo.
If the entire circulation is sold, the magazine will take in as much as it
would otherwise make in an entire year.
Keep calm!
And why?
Islamic
organizations in France have called on French Muslims to stay calm and to
accept the publication of the magazine. The cartoonist behind the new drawing
of the crying Muhammad can't understand all the excitement. "It's not a
cover showing a terrorist," Luz told an improvised press conference.
"There's no terrorist at all. It's just a man crying. A good man, crying.
I'm sorry if someone was expecting something else. That's our
choice."
Biard
declared that his magazine would not spare any religion in future. The right to
blasphemy had to be defended. "Secularism isn't some vague concept,"
he said. "It's a system of values. We have to be clear that the separation
of state and church is the most important principle of our republic. Without
it, freedom, equality, and brotherhood are impossible."
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