French cartoonists killed in Paris took a profane aim at the world
By Ray Sanchez, CNN | Updated 7:24 PM ET, Wed Jan 7, 2015
(CNN)With pen names Charb,
Wolinski, Cabu, Tignous and Honore, they were famous for targeting all forms of
authority with the world's sharpest, no-holds-barred political cartoons. But that irreverence has cost
some of France's most revered and controversial cartoonists their lives. They
were among the 12 people killed Wednesday during a lunchtime attack on the
offices of a Paris-based satirical magazine that lampooned religious symbols of
all faiths.
Charlie Hebdo magazine editor
Stephane "Charb" Charbonnier was killed when hooded attackers
carrying assault rifles burst in and shouted "Allahu akbar," Arabic
for "God is great," as they opened fire, according to Paris prosecutor
Francois Molins. The attackers said they avenged the prophet.
The dead included Georges
Wolinski, who worked under the pen name Wolinski, Jean "Cabu" Cabut,
Bernard "Tignous" Verlhac and Philippe Honore, known as Honore --
ranked among the most popular and best-known members of a provocative staff
whose cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in recent years angered some Muslims. Their work also made them
targets, and they paid the ultimate sacrifice.
Also killed was journalist,
economist and Charlie Hebdo shareholder Bernard Maris.
Patrick Klugman, deputy mayor
of Paris, said the victims included "the most famous cartoonists" in
France in decades.
"It's a very big and deep
shock for all the press and for all the world," he said. "It's a
major, major loss. Never a newspaper has been (targeted) by this
violence."
Throughout France and Europe,
thousands rallied Wednesday evening, expressing solidarity with France and
Charlie Hebdo and defiance to those behind the bloodshed.
At an event in Paris' Place de
la Republique, demonstrators raised pens in honor of the slain cartoonists and
chanted, "We are Charlie!" Pictures posted online showed similar
demonstrations in other cities, including Rome, Berlin and Barcelona.
Stephane 'Charb' Charbonnier
Charbonnier, like his magazine,
was no stranger to controversy for lampooning a variety of subjects, including
Christianity. But his staff's acerbic take on Islam generated the most
attention and vitriol and made him a target for extremists. Charbonnier, 47, became editor
of Charlie Hebdo in 2009, Britain's Sky News reported. The al Qaeda magazine Inspire,
in its March 2013 edition, ran a "Wanted: Dead or Alive" poster that
included Charbonnier. His latest cover featured a
caricature of controversial French author Michel Houellebecq, who penned a
novel set in a France governed by Muslims. The country has the largest Muslim
population in Western Europe, with an estimated 4.7 million followers of the
faith. The cartoon shows Houellebecq
saying, "In 2022, I will do Ramadan."
Charlie Hebdo's last tweet
before Wednesday's attack featured a cartoon of ISIS leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi and the words, "And, above all, health."
"We do provocation; it's
been 20 years since we've been doing provocation, and it's being noticed only
when we talked about Islam or this part of Islam which raises problems and
which is a minority," Charbonnier told BFMTV in 2012.
"And when the government
asks us not to do any provocation, we have the impression that three idiots who
demonstrated in the streets represent all of Islam. It's the government who
insults Muslims by saying that. You have to take them as they are. One has to
mock them using humor, disarm them with humor and not give them any credit. By
taking them seriously and sending regiments of riot cops to hold them, one
takes them seriously."
Earlier cartoons of the
Prophet Mohammed -- depictions that are deplored by Muslims -- spurred protests
and the burning of the magazine's office three years ago.
In November 2011, the office
caught fire the day Charlie Hebdo was due to publish a cover poking fun at
Islamic law.
"It's an indescribable
mess," Charbonnier told CNN at the time. "Everything has melted: the
keyboards, the computers. Everything is dead. Ashes cover all of our
belongings."
A year later, in an interview
with Le Monde newspaper, Charbonnier gave no indication there were any plans to
change Charlie Hebdo.
"It may sound
pompous," he said, "but I'd rather die standing than live on my
knees."
His death, and those of others
who worked with him, spurred a wave of support for the publication in France
and around the world.
On social media, a trend
emerged of people tweeting past covers from the magazine as well as the words
"Je suis Charlie," or "I am Charlie."
In September 2012, as France
was closing embassies in about 20 countries amid the global furor over the
anti-Islam film "Innocence of Muslims," the magazine published an
issue featuring a cartoon that appeared to depict a naked Mohammed, along with
a cover that appeared to show Mohammed being pushed in a wheelchair by an
Orthodox Jew.
Charlie Hebdo journalist
Laurent Leger defended the magazine at the time, saying the cartoons were not
intended to provoke anger or violence.
"The aim is to
laugh," Leger told BFMTV in 2012. "We want to laugh at the extremists
-- every extremist. They can be Muslim, Jewish, Catholic. Everyone can be
religious, but extremist thoughts and acts we cannot accept."
"In France, we always
have the right to write and draw. And if some people are not happy with this,
they can sue us and we can defend ourselves. That's democracy," Leger
said. "You don't throw bombs, you discuss, you debate. But you don't act
violently. We have to stand and resist pressure from extremism."
The weekly, which was founded
in 1970, became renowned for its daring takedowns of politicians, public
figures and religious symbols of all faiths.
Bernard 'Tignous' Verlhac
Ecuadorian cartoonist Xavier
Bonilla, 50, said he got to know Verlhac during seminars with Cartooning for
Peace, an international initiative created to promote tolerance through
illustration.
"Tignous was great at
humor and had an easy manner about himself," said Bonilla. "He
strongly believed in freedom of the press, something that becomes evident when
you see his cartoons. He was a man who enjoyed freedom to its fullest in his
artistic creativity and published his cartoons without fear."
Verlhac, 58, was a contributor
to the magazine, Sky News reported.
Bonilla recalled a reception
he once attended with Verlhac at the French Embassy in Bogota, Colombia.
"He asked about 10 women
to pose for him seated on a sofa," he said. "Tignous took his time
making a drawing of all of them posing. When he finally showed them the
drawing, they were not very pleased because it was a cartoon that didn't really
make them look beautiful. He simply told them, 'I drew them just like you look
and that's how I see you.' Then he laughed out loud. This was the kind of dark
humor that was also evident in his cartoons. He was great at that. He was a
great artist."
Georges Wolinski
Mexican cartoonist Felipe
Galindo said he was a friend of Wolinski, who once presented him with a award.
"He was a great satirical
artist," Galindo said. "Nothing was sacred for him. He would touch
anything. But he was also a very gentle, very kind man."
Wolinski, 80, began his career
as a political cartoonist in 1960, Britain's Sky News reported.
Galindo said Wolinski -- who
was on the magazine's editorial board -- and the other satirists lived
following "a French tradition of political cartooning about kings and
Napoleon and everything. They followed that tradition to an extreme."
Wolinski and the others were
more concerned about possible retaliation against French citizens than
themselves, Galindo said.
"They were very proud of
their heritage and their country and freedom of expression," he said.
"They were scapegoats. But the pen is mightier than the sword or guns in
this case. This will enforce the idea of preserving our freedom of
expression."
Under the Instragram handle
Wolinskikiki, a daughter of the cartoonist posted a photo her father's drawing
table with the caption, "Papa is gone, not Wolinski."
Jean 'Cabu' Cabut
Cabut, 76, who contributed
comic strips and caricatures to the magazine, had his first illustrations
published in Paris newspapers in 1954, according to Sky News. He studied art
studies at the École Estienne.
In 2006, he penned a
controversial cartoon depicting the Prophet Mohammed that appeared on the cover
of Charlie Hebdo, Sky News reported.
Philippe Honore
Honore illustrated the cartoon
featured on the last tweet on Charlie Hebdo's Twitter feed Wednesday morning.
The cartoon is a drawing of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi offering
his best wishes for 2015.
"Best wishes by the
way," the tweet reads. "And health above all," the terror leader
is quoted as saying in the illustration signed by Honore.
Bernard Maris
Maris also was a professor at
the Institute of European Studies of the University of Paris VIII, Sky News
reported.
CNN's Rafael Romo and Lorenzo
Ferrigno contributed to this report.
The mood in Paris, near the scene of the attack, was both apprehensive and angry. Ilhem Bonik, 38, said that she has lived in Paris for 14 years and has never been so afraid. “I am Arab, Tunisian, Muslim, and I support the families, the journalists and all the people involved,” she said. “This is against Islam.”
When journalists are killed for expressing their views, it is one step away from burning books, said Annette Gerhard, 60. “It’s like Kristallnacht,” Ms. Gerhard said, noting that her family had died in Nazi deportations. “There’s no respect for human life.”
In memory of Cabu, Wolinski, Charb and Tignous.
|
Aujourd'hui Je suis Charlie
BAS L'ISLAM: RELIGION DE L'ESCLAVAGE
ET DE LA MORT
ET DE LA MORT
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