This article first appeared in New English Review.
The French satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, is back
in the news again. On January 7, 2015,
al-Qaeda-linked terrorists attacked the Paris office of Charlie Hebdo
and murdered 12 people in retaliation for the cartoons mocking the Prophet
Mohammad that Charlie had published. The incident led to worldwide
outrage and an international defense of freedom of expression. To mark the 8th
anniversary of the attack and to show solidarity for women’s rights in Iran,
Charlie held a competition
for cartoons to mock the mullahs who rule Iran and who have clamped down so
brutally on demonstrators protesting the recent death of a young woman who had
“improperly” worn her headscarf at the hands of Iran’s “morality police”. To
be blunt, a couple of the submissions exhibited by Charlie are beyond
tasteless and should be prefaced with a viewer warning. That said, the question
arises of whether they should have been censored, especially by French
standards. They do not directly attack Islam, but they do definitely insult the
mullahs, which in itself, is hardly a bad thing.
At any rate, there is outrage in Teheran, and the Iranian
government has made it clear they are not amused. More ominously, Iran’s
foreign minister has made it clear that there will be a response, and we all
know what that means coming from the world’s largest state sponsor of
terrorism. Along more traditional diplomatic lines, the Iranian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs has summoned the French ambassador in Teheran for a formal
dressing down, and the Iranian Embassy in Paris has issued a formal letter
demanding that the French government take action. Just what action was not
specified, but it can be assumed that Iran wants Charlie Hebdo to be
punished, shut down, prosecuted, or maybe even have its staff stoned to death
on the Place de la Concord. As I write, it is not known what the French
response will be.
What I would like to see is for the French government to
tell the mullahs that there will be no punishment for Charlie Hebdo, and
that France will not accept moral lectures from Iran. It would be nice if
France reminded Teheran they (the French) resent seeing so many French churches
being attacked physically by disaffected Muslim migrants. It would be even nicer to see France-to say
nothing about the rest of the civilized world- break relations with Teheran
altogether, but I don’t expect that to happen.
The question also arises as to what France would do if they
are hit with a terrorist attack-not just another attack, of which they have had
many, but one clearly traced back to Teheran. That would be an act of war and
should be treated accordingly. But then again, this is France we are talking
about here. However, the West cannot allow itself to be threatened into taking
away our freedom of expression. We allow our own majority religion, Christianity,
to be criticized or even insulted. Why should we make an exception for Islam or
in this case, mullahs in Iran? The obvious comeback is that Christians don’t
respond with violence, but some Muslims do. In addition, as long as the West
has to deal with jihadi terrorism, and as long as barbaric 7th-century practices continue to be carried out in many Islamic countries, Islam
will be subjected to criticism. As it is, many Europeans, who don’t enjoy the
same First Amendment rights that we Americans enjoy, are reluctant to speak out
on these issues, not just fearing a violent Muslim response, but punitive
action by their own governments.
Of course, writing as an American, I should not forget the
shameful action in 2012 by the Obama Justice Department in jailing the producer of a film (“The Innocence of
Muslims”) in the US mocking the Prophet Mohammad after riots broke out in the
Middle East in protest.
This situation, as it stands, could calm down, blow over, or
quickly develop into something much more serious. It is likely that a lone wolf
jihadi or group will decide to act on their own. It is all too easy to say that
security in France must be heightened. The security and intelligence forces are
already stretched to the maximum. Many will say this is a time for skillful
diplomacy on the part of the French. I say it is a time for firmness. They
don’t have to say they agree with the latest cartoons, but they should not
allow a government like Iran’s to dictate a change in their laws protecting
freedom of expression.
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