No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsCrimePublication attacked in Paris has history of bold satire

Publication attacked in Paris has history of bold satire

https://www.facebook.com/106626879360459/photos/a.106706332685847.10430.106626879360459/796253847064422/?type=1&theater

PARIS — Charlie Hebdo, the satirical magazine where shootings Wednesday left at least 12 people dead, has a long history of pushing the limits of expression.

In 2011 Charlie Hebdo published a special edition called “Charia Hebdo” featuring Muhammad as a “guest editor.” The cover depicted the prophet threatening readers with “100 lashes if you don’t die of laughter.” Shortly thereafter, Charlie Hebdo’s Paris offices were firebombed in an overnight attack that caused no injuries.

Just before Wednesday’s attack the magazine’s official Twitter and Facebook accounts published a cartoon of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi offering wishes of good health for the New Year. And the current cover is on “Submission,” a book released Wednesay about a future in which an Islamic France is led by a Muslim president who bans women from the workplace.

https://www.facebook.com/106626879360459/photos/a.106706332685847.10430.106626879360459/871700782853061/?type=1&theater

In recent weeks, the magazine has had two police officers stationed outside its doors because of terrorist threats, Rocco Contento of the SGP police union told BFM Television.

Founded in its current incarnation in 1992, the magazine has skewered politicians, pop stars, and religious fundamentalists of all stripes in its weekly installments of caricatures, interviews, and opinionated essays. Targets of its cartoon covers have included former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn dancing in a red tutu and the late singer Michael Jackson as a skeleton shortly after his death from a drug overdose.

Before Christmas last year, the cover depicted Charlie’s take on a traditional nativity scene — a spread-eagled Mary giving birth to the baby Jesus. That image currently decorates the magazine’s official Twitter profile.

https://www.facebook.com/106626879360459/photos/a.106706332685847.10430.106626879360459/860230387333434/?type=1&theater

Though little-known outside France, Charlie Hebdo — the name means simply Charlie Weekly — is one of the country’s better-selling political magazines, with an average circulation of about 100,000.

In 2006, it printed cartoons of Muhammad originally published by a Danish newspaper, which had prompted sometimes- violent protests because Muslim tradition deems depictions of the prophet to be blasphemous. Islamic organizations sued the magazine for the drawings, a case dismissed by a French court in 2008, according to the Charlie Hebdo website.

Politicians in France, which has Europe’s largest Muslim population, have long understood that the magazine might inflame cultural tensions. During the 2006 controversy, then-President Jacques Chirac asked media organizations to avoid “provocation” of Muslims. And in 2012 former Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault called for restraint when Charlie Hebdo published more cartoons representing Muhammad. The same year, Agence France-Presse reported that police had interrogated a man who called for the beheading of Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Stephane Charbonnier, known as Charb.

The magazine’s writers and owners have been unbowed, defending their content as free speech and arguing that they’ve satirized all major religions. In 2010, a cover showed Pope Benedict giving holy communion with a condom. A 2012 story on gay marriage depicted a ménage-a-trois featuring the Holy Spirit, Jesus, and God.

https://www.facebook.com/106626879360459/photos/a.106706332685847.10430.106626879360459/860171144006025/?type=1&theater

Charlie Hebdo is owned by a holding company, Les Editions Rotatives, that is controlled by staffers including Editor-in-Chief Philippe Val and cartoonist Jean Cabut. They helped re-found the magazine 11 years after a previous version, which ran from 1969 to 1981, ran out of money and shut down.

© 2015, Bloomberg News

Trending Now

Heavy Military Security Surrounds El Mencho Burial in Mexico

Soldiers, National Guard troops and police formed rings of security around a funeral home and cemetery as the body of alleged Jalisco New Generation...

Costa Rica Installs First Sun Meter to Cut Skin Cancer Risk

The College of Physicians and Surgeons installed the country’s first solmáforo at its Sabana Sur headquarters as a pilot project to promote daily protection...

JetBlue Sale Has Cheap Fares and Hotel Bundles for Spring Trips to Costa Rica

JetBlue has started a limited-time sale that cuts costs for travelers heading to Costa Rica this spring. The airline targets U.S. departures with one-way...

El Salvador Hands Down Sentences of Up to 300 Years

A court in El Salvador sentenced 39 members of a criminal gang to prison terms of up to 300 years for murder and multiple...

Costa Rica Forms First Symphony Orchestra With Only Women Performers

Costa Rica now has its first symphony orchestra that consists exclusively of women. The Sistema Nacional de Educación Musical assembled the ensemble as part...

Costa Rica Caribbean Community Pushes Sustainable Sportfishing to Protect Jobs and Wildlife

Barra del Colorado’s tourism-fishing sector held a community training session aimed at tightening standards for sportfishing and protecting the fishery that sustains much of...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica