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Je ne suis pas Charlie (I am not Charlie)

category france / belgium / luxemburg | migration / racism | opinion / analysis author Monday January 12, 2015 06:29author by José Antonio Gutiérrez D. Report this post to the editors

Translator: Evelin Cotella. Correction by Diarmuid Breatnach

To begin with, let me make it clear from the outset that I consider the attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo to be an atrocity and that I do not believe that it is justifiable under any circumstances to make a military target of a journalist, no matter what our opinion on the quality of his journalism may be. The same is valid in France, as it is in Colombia or in Palestine. Also, nor do I identify with any fundamentalism, whether it be Christian, Jewish or Muslim, nor indeed with Frenchified mock-secularism either, which makes a goddess of the “République”. [Castellano] [Türkçe] [Italiano] [ελληνικά]
kalvellido_charlie_hebdo_1.jpg


Je ne suis pas Charlie (I am not Charlie)

To begin with, let me make it clear from the outset that I consider the attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo to be an atrocity and that I do not believe that it is justifiable under any circumstances to make a military target of a journalist, no matter what our opinion on the quality of his journalism may be. The same is valid in France, as it is in Colombia or in Palestine. Also, nor do I identify with any fundamentalism, whether it be Christian, Jewish or Muslim, nor indeed with Frenchified mock-secularism either, which makes a goddess of the “République”.

I present these necessary explanations since no matter how much the high priests of politics insist that we live under an “exemplary democracy” with “great liberties”, we all know that Big Brother is watching us and that any speech outside the script is severely punished. But I believe that to condemn the attack on Charlie Hebdo is not the same as celebrating a magazine that is, fundamentally, a monument to intolerance, racism and colonial arrogance.

Thousands, understandably affected by this attack, have circulated messages saying “Je suis Charlie” (I am Charlie), as if this message were the ultimate expression in defence of freedom. Well, then, I am not Charlie. I do not identify with the degrading and caricaturing representation of the Islamic world, taking place in the middle of the “War against terrorism” era, with all the racist and colonialist baggage this entails.

I cannot view with equanimity the constant symbolic aggression that has as its counterpart a physical and real aggression, which is the bombing and military occupation of countries belonging to this cultural horizon. Nor can I happily see these cartoons and their offensive texts with a light heart, when Arabs are one of the most marginalized, impoverished and exploited sectors of French society which has historically been brutally treated. I do not forget that in the early 1960s, in the Paris Metro, the police massacred 200 Algerians by clubbing, just because the latter were demanding an end to the French occupation of their country, which had already led to a total of a million dead “uncivilized” Arabs.

This is not about innocent cartoons drawn by free thinkers but rather about messages produced by mass media (yes, though in an alternative posture, Chalie Hebdo is part of the mass media), loaded with hatred and stereotypes reinforcing a discourse that considers the Arabs as barbarians to be contained, uprooted, controlled, repressed, oppressed and exterminated. These are messages the implicit purpose of which is to justify the invasions of Middle Eastern countries as well as the many interventions and bombings orchestrated in the West in defence of the new imperial map. The Spanish film actor Willy Toledo controversially commented, no more than was obvious, that “The West kills every day. Silently.” And that is what Charlie and his black humour hides under the cover of satire.

I do not forget the front cover of Charlie Hebdo issue N°1099, in which it trivialized the massacre of more than a thousand Egyptians by a brutal military dictatorship which has the approval of the USA and of France, carrying a cartoon with a text declaring “Slaughter in Egypt. The Koran is shit: it doesn't stop bullets.” The cartoon showed a Muslim man riddled with bullets that had passed through a copy of the Koran, with which he had been trying to protect himself. Perhaps some find this funny. In their time too, the English colonists in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, thought it funny to have photographs of themselves taken, with wide smiles and rifle in hand, a foot on the corpses of the still-warm and bleeding bodies of the native people they had hunted.

Rather than funny, that cartoon to me seems violent and colonialist, an abuse of the fictitious and manipulated western freedom of the press. How would people react if I were to design a magazine cover bearing the following text: “Slaughter in Paris. Charlie Hebdo is shit: it doesn’t stop bullets” and made a cartoon of the deceased and gunned-down Jean Cabut holding a copy of the magazine in his hands? Clearly that would be outrageous: the life of a Frenchman is sacred. The life of an Egyptian (or Palestinian, Iraqi, a Syrian, etc.) is “humoristic” material. For that reason I am not Charlie, because for me, the life of each one of those Egyptians massacred is as sacred as is any of those caricaturists assassinated today.

We already know what to expect now: there will be speeches defending press freedom from countries which in 1999 gave their blessing to the NATO bombing of the Serbian public TV station in Belgrade, calling it “the Ministry of Lies”; countries that remained silent while Israel bombed the Al-Manar TV station in Beirut in 2006; those that respond with silence to the murders of Colombian and Palestinian critical journalists.

After the beautiful pro-freedom rhetoric will come the liberticide action: more McCarthyism, disguised colonial “anti-terrorism”, more colonial interventions, more restrictions of those “democratic guarantees” threatened with extinction and, of course, more racism. Europe is consumed in a spiral of xenophobic hatred, islamophobia, anti-semitism (in fact, the Palestinians are Semitic) and this atmosphere has reached unbearable levels. The Muslims are already the Jews of 21st Century Europe and neo-Nazi parties are becoming respectable again, 80 years later, thanks to this detestable feeling.

Because of all this, in spite of the feelings of repulsion engendered in me by the Paris attack, Je ne suis pas Charlie.

José Antonio Gutiérrez D.
7 January, 2015

 #   Title   Author   Date 
   bad news     Markos Trogoto    Mon Jan 12, 2015 19:41 
   Some comradely disagreement ... the issue of jihadists ...     Lucien van der Walt    Tue Jan 13, 2015 21:08 
   CGA Lyon     Sam Berckman    Wed Jan 14, 2015 04:04 
   As a Muslim, I'm Fed Up With the Hypocrisy of the Free Speech Fundamentalists     Mehdi Hasan    Wed Jan 14, 2015 18:44 
   Location and power     Andrew    Wed Jan 14, 2015 19:57 
   indeed!     John Glennon    Wed Jan 14, 2015 21:38 
   Try again     Peulope    Mon Jan 19, 2015 11:17 
   The White Power Rally in Paris -European Lives Have Always Mattered More Than Others     AJAMU BARAKA    Tue Jan 20, 2015 17:25 
   The White Power Rally in Paris -European Lives Have Always Mattered More Than Others     AJAMU BARAKA    Tue Jan 20, 2015 17:25 
 10   A village in Nigeria and a view of the world     Lucien van der Walt    Wed Jan 21, 2015 22:12 
 11   get a grip     What?    Wed Jan 21, 2015 22:35 
 12   Are Muslims persecuted?     Wayne Price    Thu Jan 22, 2015 13:52 
 13   ‘Ethnic apartheid’ exists in France, says PM Manuel Valls     Alasdair Sandford    Thu Jan 22, 2015 17:20 
 14   Islamophobia in Europe, contexts and farcical debate     José Antonio Gutiérrez D.    Thu Jan 22, 2015 19:37 
 15   Islamaphobia, Islamism, global perspectives     Lucien van der Walt    Thu Jan 29, 2015 19:43 
 16   ...     José Antonio Gutiérrez D.    Thu Jan 29, 2015 21:07 
 17   To be quite clear (and be clear on the issues at stake)     Lucien van der Walt    Thu Jan 29, 2015 21:18 
 18   Last bit ...     Lucien van der Walt    Sat Apr 04, 2015 22:14 
 19   ...     José Antonio Gutiérrez D.    Tue Apr 07, 2015 09:54 
 20   ...     José Antonio Gutiérrez D.    Tue Apr 07, 2015 09:54 
 21   Clarity and apology ...     Lucien van der Walt    Wed Apr 15, 2015 18:54 
 22   "Pure working class"     Lucien van der Walt    Wed Apr 15, 2015 18:59 
 23   Hijab-Wearing Woman Filmed Being Knocked To Ground As Hate Crime Soars Across London     Lee Moran    Tue Sep 08, 2015 03:57 
 24   Jokes about how glad they are Alan Kurdi drowned before becoming a rapist     Anti-fascist    Thu Jan 14, 2016 20:05 


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