Employees of the French satirical
newspaper Charlie Hebdo and the left-wing daily Libération worked at Libération
offices on Saturday. CreditPool photo by Bertrand Guay
PARIS — Around 9:10 on Monday evening, laughter and a round of applause
broke out among the surviving staff members of Charlie Hebdo, followed shortly
by cries — joyous if ironic — of “Allahu akbar!”
The group was cheering Rénald Luzier, a cartoonist known as Luz, who on the
umpteenth try had produced what the editors thought was the perfect cover image for
the most anticipated issue ever of this scrappy, iconoclastic weekly, which
will appear on Wednesday. It showed the Prophet Muhammad holding a sign saying,
“Je suis Charlie” (“I am Charlie”), with the words “All is forgiven” in French
above it on a green background.
“Habemus a front page,” Gérard Biard, one of the paper’s top editors, said
with a smile, emerging from the staff’s makeshift newsroom and deploying the
phrase used to announce a new pope. To find the right image, he said: “We asked
ourselves: ‘What do we want to say? What should we say? And in what way?’ About
the subject, unfortunately, we had no doubt.”
Since Friday, just two days after gunmen had slaughtered 12 people at the
paper, about 25 members of the staff had been huddled in the offices of the
leftist daily Libération, under heavy police protection, to work on the next
issue. They were still in shock, and confounded to have suddenly become heroes
of free speech to the same political and religious establishments they had long
mocked.
As the journalists wrestled with grief, there were flashes of mordant
humor. Cartoonists sketched while describing how hard it was to go on after the
horror in their offices; others lashed out in anger at the killers. The main
question looming over the moment: How could they possibly be funny at a time
like this?
“We don’t know how to do anything but laugh,” said Mr. Biard, who was on
vacation the day of the shootings.
Worldwide, the massacre has set off debates about security lapses, Islamic
radicalism and turning points. Millions of supporters have embraced the slogan
“I am Charlie.” But here, in a top-floor conference room with a stunning view
of the Eiffel Tower, this was just a bunch of cartoonists and journalists:
crying, snacking, laughing, breaking the rules against smoking indoors and
trying to hold themselves together long enough to produce an issue.
Their first editorial meeting last Friday began not with article pitches
but with remembrances for murdered colleagues, updates on the wounded and a
surprise visit by Prime Minister Manuel Valls and Fleur Pellerin, the culture
and communication minister — rare appearances at a newspaper more akin to The
Onion than to Le Monde (and more likely to skewer those officials than
interview them).
“We decided that we would do a normal edition, not a memorial issue,” Mr.
Biard said on Friday, where an emotional three-hour staff meeting had just
ended. Caterers brought in trays of smoked salmon, sandwiches and cream-filled
desserts. A row of plainclothes police officers stood watch outside.
Journalists hovered. Five desktop computers from Le Monde were set up on a
round glass table. Since the attacks, donations have been pouring in, and a
fund has been set up, jaidecharlie.fr (“I
help Charlie”).
As the newsroom sprang to life on Friday afternoon, Mr. Biard reflected.
“They killed people who drew cartoon characters. That’s it. That’s all these
guys do. If they’re afraid of that,” what’s their god?, he asked, inserting an
expletive for emphasis.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/13/arts/international/charlie-hebdo-staff-prepares-next-issue.html?ref=arts&_r=0
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