At the 2015 attack conference, the spirit of complete freedom "Charlie"
Five years after the 7 January 2015 killings that reduced editorial staff and injured several members, physical pain remains and psychological suffering is ubiquitous for these "survivors." But cartoonists and newspaper reporters made sure that they did not deny what he meant by "Charlie's spirit."
Killed but not "submissive": Charlie Hebdo's team on Wednesday held a rally for freedom of expression and against "religious fanaticism", "fighting for life" for the satire newspaper. "Basically what we want is to be able to attract what we want, without experiencing anything," Riss weekly director Laurent Sourisseau said of his real name, before the Special Court of Paris. Five years after the 7 January 2015 killings that reduced editorial staff and injured several members, physical pain remains and psychological suffering is ubiquitous for these “survivors”. But cartoonists and newspaper reporters made sure that they did not deny what he meant by "Charlie's spirit."
"Are we living in freedom or are we living as slaves? I want to live freely and not submit to the crazy patience of fanatics," said Riss in a neutral voice. Injured to his right shoulder after being shot from a Kalashnikov, he struggled to get his arm back and then pulled it. Since the attack, he has been constantly followed by guards, like other figures in the newspapers. The attack, which resulted in the deaths of ten people at the Charlie Hebdo site, "shocked him with violence" but also by the fact that "what happened at that moment", another climate was not a "permanent threat" in his opinion. Newspapers have become the target of jihadists by publishing caricatures of Muhammad in 2006, a "motive for evil" for the historian Charlie Hebdo Richard Malka.
Freedom preserved!
Since 2013, its editorial director, cartoonist Charb - one of the victims of the attack - has been on a list of targets published by al-Qaeda and is under police protection. "We then believe with great optimism that in France we can design what we want, but around us the environment is changing. We are seeing the emergence of uncertainty, and it must be called a new form of totalitarianism," stressed Laurent Sourisseau. After him, emergency doctor Patrick Pelloux, a former newspaper columnist and a close ally of Charlie, attacked "obscurantist" and "religious fanatics" ideologies. "Nothing prevents us from believing. But we do not prevent us from thinking, that we do not prevent us from creating", hammer the doctor, greeting in the bar "courage all teams to keep life free to speak".
Badly injured in the attack, Simon Fieschi's site must first use a walking stick. The effect, "physical, sensory, psychological", is "for life", but still ensures "to see a glass half full." "This bullet didn't miss me, but I would also say that it didn't hit me. And it's the same for the newspapers: we woke up from", he ran to the bar. A lead reporter for the week, Fabrice Nicolino also likes to look forward when he talks about the attack. "Charlie, this is not just a culture of death, this is not just an attack. It is also a call to life," the journalist stressed. After being injured in the previous Islamic attack on Paris in 1985, Fabrice Nicolino was hit in the leg and stomach when Charlie was attacked, as well as walking around in the groin. Suffering only came after her "struggle" for Charlie.
This paper, "we deserve to like it or hate, Charlie's whole team is not open", but "it's about freedom, and freedom has to do with everything!", S 'brought sexagenarians, before criticizing his colleagues' lack of interest for a week. "Scary people attack us, frankly I hate them, I spit them out. Freedom cannot be talked about, it is defended!" Fourteen defendants were tried until November 10 before the Paris Special Assault Court for their logistical support to the perpetrators of the weekly attack, police and Hyper Cacher shops between 7 and 9 January 2015 which resulted in 17 deaths.
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