October 25,
2020
A
demonstrator holds a French flag with the slogan "Freedom of Speech"
during a demonstration against the beheading of a school teacher last week in
Paris. AP
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On 16
October, a French teen of Chechen origin tracked down a high school history
teacher and brutally beheaded him in a street in the Paris suburb of
Conflans-Saint-Honorine.
According
to police officials, the suspect armed with a knife and an airsoft gun — which
fires plastic pellets — was shot dead about 600 meters (yards) from where the
male teacher was killed after he failed to respond to orders to put down his
arms and acted in a threatening manner.
The
teacher, Samuel Paty, had shown images mocking Prophet Mohammad in a lesson on
freedom of expression.
The
beheading is not the first incident of violence involving the Charlie Hebdo
caricatures of the Prophet of Islam. The cartoons first appeared in a Danish
daily, Jyllands-Posten. Charlie Hebdo reprinted them in 2006, angering Muslims
in France and across the world.
According
to a BBC report, the magazine's offices were fire-bombed in November 2011 when
it published a provocative cartoon of Prophet Mohammad under the title
"Charia Hebdo". In 2013, Charlie Hebdo published a special edition
featuring the cartoons.
Two years
later, in 2015, a group of gunmen attacked the newspaper's offices in Paris and
massacred 12 people, including some of the country's most celebrated
cartoonists.
"Charlie
Hebdo is part of a venerable tradition in French journalism going back to the
scandal sheets that denounced Marie-Antoinette in the run-up to the French
Revolution. The tradition combines left-wing radicalism with a provocative
scurrility that often borders on the obscene," the article said.
This year,
as France began the trials for the 2015 attack amid the COVID-19 attack in
September, Charlie Hebdo repubbed the caricatures of the prophet to underscore
the right of freedom of expression.
Quickly, a
teenager from Pakistan was arrested after stabbing two people with a meat
cleaver outside the newspaper's former offices. They did not suffer threatening
injuries. The 18-year-old told the police that he was upset over the
caricatures.
French
president Emmanuel Macron publicly denounced the teacher's beheading calling it
an "Islamist terror attack", but cautioned its citizens not to be
divided because that’s 'what the extremists want.'
“We must
stand all together as citizens,” he said.
Notwithstanding
Macron's call for unity, France has been jostling between freedom of expression
and Islamophobia over the Charlie Hebdo caricatures ever since the magazine
reprinted them in 2006.
In France,
many citizens fiercely defend the laïcité — French word for secularism that
separates religion and the state in the country — and see freedom of expression
as absolute.
For many
French citizens, the freedom to practice one's religion is just as important as
another person's right to poke fun at it. Even if it's ribaldry that may be
perceived as insulting — such as the Charlie Hebdo caricatures of Prophet
Mohammad.
For many
among France's large Muslim community, however, laïcité has meant a lack of
respect towards their beliefs.
Charlie
Hebdos cartoons on Prophet Mohammad have France jostling between freedom of
speech and Islamophobia
Demonstrators
hold placards reading "I am a teacher" during a demonstration in
Paris in support of freedom of speech and to pay tribute to a French history
teacher who was beheaded near Paris after discussing caricatures of Islam's
Prophet Muhammad with his class. AP
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Secularism in France
The French
Constitution defines the state only as secular, but it doesn't delineate the
boundaries of this secularism. And as a result, secularism in France appears to
have evolved into a weapon to identify that which is French and hence accepted,
and that which is "not French", and hence to be rejected.
According
to an article in Times, the issue at hand is "how the country’s 5.7
million Muslims — the largest Muslim population in the European Union —
assimilate, or not, in a country whose constitution is based on an unyielding
principle of secularism and which has seen multiple terrorist attacks by
jihadists since 2015".
According
to The Associated Press, before the recent beheading, the parent of a student
had also filed a complaint against the teacher.
In a video
posted recently on social media, a man describing himself as a father at the
school said the teacher who was killed had recently shown an offensive image of
a man and told students it was “the prophet of the Muslims".
“What was
the message he wanted to send these children?... Why does a history teacher
behave this way in front of 13-year-olds?” the man asked. He called on other
angry parents to contact him, and relay the message.
The father
has since then been sent to police custody. France's interior minister Gerald
Darmanin accused him of launching a 'fatwa' against the school teacher.
Macron
exploits beheading for politics
French
president Macron, who is known to provoke outrage and is facing tough
competition from the Marie Le Pen-led far-right National Rally, has been
exploiting the beheading for political ends.
The
beheading has also given him an opportunity to push new legislation
strengthening the 1905 act on laïcité, allowing for closer scrutiny of schools
and associations exclusively serving religious communities.
“Islam is a
religion in crisis all over the world today, we don’t see it only in our
country,” Macron said earlier this month.
Charlie
Hebdos cartoons on Prophet Mohammad have France jostling between freedom of
speech and Islamophobia
File
image of French president Emmanuel Macron. AP
-----
The proposed
bill, which would go to parliament early next year, would require all children
from the age of three to attend French schools, and allow distance learning
only for medical reasons. Associations, which receive state funding, would be
made accountable for their spending, their sometimes invisible leaders and be
forced to reimburse misused funds.
The
proposed measures nevertheless address mosques, which Macron said are sometimes
subject to hostile takeovers, as well as imams to keep houses of prayer and preachers
out of the control of people who use religion for their own ends.
“In a few
days, you can see radical Islamists...take control of associations (running
mosques) and all their finances. That won't happen again," the French
president had said.
Police Crackdown
Three days
after the beheading of the history teacher, French police swooped on radical
Islamist groups across the country. They closed a prominent mosque for sharing
the parent's video and carried out a mass expulsion of foreigners identified in
government anti-terrorism files.
According
to Agence France-Presse, Darmanin, a hard-liner who has been the public face of
the government’s crackdown, said the swoop on Islamist networks was designed to
send a message that “enemies of the Republic” would not enjoy “a minute’s
respite”.
“Fear is
about to change sides,” Macron had said during a meeting with key ministers
last week. “Islamists should not be allowed sleep soundly in our country,” he
said.
Fear did
indeed change sides. This time, innocent Muslim women bore the brunt.
Islamophobia in France
According
to a Metro.co.uk report, earlier this week, two Muslim women were ‘stabbed
repeatedly’ under the Eiffel Tower. The Paris Police arrested two white female
suspects who allegedly shouted "dirty Arabs!" as they launched the
attack.
According
to a report in The New York Times, a complaint filed by the lawyer of the women
who were attacked, the attackers also yelled slurs and telling them “go back
home” and “this is not your home".
One of the
survivors is suffering from a perforated lung, the report said,
Islamophobia
in France, however, is older than these events. The country is home to some of
the most well-known Islamophobic, racist writers including Jean-Marie Le Pen of
the National Front (now known as National Rally) and Renaud Camus whose theory
of Great Replacement inspired the Christchurch shooting in New Zealand that
killed 50 Muslims.
Even the
European New Right or Nouvelle Droite (ND), which repackages racism as blood
and soil ethno-nationalism, originated in France in the 1960s. Prior to this is
the country's history of committing atrocities in Algeria and during its
colonial era is well-known.
Two years
before Charlie Hebdo would print these controversial caricatures of the Prophet
of Islam, France had in 2004, already banned the Islamic headscarf in public. A
year after the 2015 attack on the Charlie Hebdo office, it had banned the Burkinis.
France has
always wanted those not ethnically 'French' to reject their past, including
their culture and beliefs, and be secular in the truest sense possible, so as
to integrate with 'mainstream' society. For some, however, this only represents
a new form of intolerance.
With inputs from agencies
Original Headline: Charlie Hebdo's cartoons on
Prophet Mohammad have France jostling between freedom of speech and
Islamophobia
Source: The First Post
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