Charlie Hebdo and Freedom of Speech
It has been a rough week, to say the least, in my home country of France. The worst terrorist attacks in over 50 years made 20 dead, including the 3 terrorists responsible for the attacks, openly directed at the cartoonists of satirist magazine Charlie Hebdo. Their office was previously firebombed back in 2011 in response to their depictions of the Muslim prophet Mohammed.
This is an absolutely despicable act and the French police force is to be commended for quickly locating and bringing those terrorists to justice, without any collateral casualties. All deaths have been at the hands of the terrorists, including their own.
This ruthless act of terror was quickly seen as an attack on freedom of expression in a proudly secular country. The national demonstrations that followed on Sunday, reaching a record estimated 3.7 million people throughout the country (about 2 million of those in the streets of Paris alone) were very inspiring. A public display not seen since the liberation of France by allied forces at the end of World War II in 1945. As I write this, the first issue of the magazine following the attack is setting astounding new sales records, selling out everywhere in less than an hour. The publisher is now printing 5 million issues in a hurry, a huge increase from its usual run of about 60,000.
However, while I really do appreciate the show of unity, I am afraid a lot of it was mostly just that… a show.