By Katy Romy
Jan 7, 2020
French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo survived the attack that decimated its editorial office in Paris on January 7, 2015. But the “Charlie spirit” is dead, says Swiss press cartoonist Thierry Barrigue with the bitter observation that “Fear has triumphed”.
In the aftermath of the carnage that killed 12 members of the editorial staff of Charlie Hebdo – as well as five others – the expression “I am Charlie” became a motto to defend freedom of expression. But this moment of ephemeral communion quickly passed, strangled by the dictates of the internet and the difficulties of the press. Thierry Barrigue, the founder of Vigousse, a satirical weekly in French-speaking Switzerland, is worried about the future of press cartoons.
Thierry Barrigue: Yes, the profession has changed enormously. Beyond the loss of these friends and their irreplaceable talent in the attacks, the press cartoon took a nasty blow. It is doing very badly because of the self-censorship imposed by publishers.
Newspapers are dying and disappearing. Designers no longer manage to make a living from their profession, or they bend to the constraints of the internet and of those imposed by people with unhealthy views on the idea of freedom.
What must be done to safeguard this freedom of expression?
We can no longer be content to draw in our corner, on a sheet, in our respective offices. We have to go back into the field, onto the streets, and into schools to secure the future of cartoons. Freedom of expression and critical thinking must be incorporated into school curricula in order to train a new generation to regard cartoons as essential to a democracy.
The satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo survived the attacks, but is the Charlie spirit still alive?
No, the famous expression “Je suis Charlie” [I am Charlie] lasted for one big demonstration in Paris, attended by heads of state who locked up press cartoonists in their own countries. The Charlie spirit lasted as long as an emotion. But it lives on through the magazine, which survived thanks to donations received after the attacks.
But in people’s minds the Charlie spirit has completely disappeared, because we are in a society that is legitimately afraid of the future. Now newspapers are afraid to publish cartoons, afraid of reactions online, afraid of anonymous internet users. However, it is not with fear that freedom of expression will advance; on the contrary, it will be pushed back.
Categories: Europe, Europe and Australia, France
