National Post (National Edition)

Teachers in France say they self-censor

- CAROLINE PAILLIEZ

PARIS • Some teachers in France say they censor themselves to avoid confrontat­ion with students and parents over religion and free speech, a problem brutally exposed when a teacher was beheaded after showing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in class.

History teacher Samuel Paty had shown the images mocking the Prophet in a lesson on freedom of expression, pictures first published by the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in 2006 that led to a deadly Islamist attack on its offices.

Paty's murder earlier this week has caused outrage in a country where the separation of church and state is fiercely defended by many. It has also exposed divisions in a society where a vocal minority in the Muslim community feels its beliefs are not respected.

Those fault lines, if anything, have got stronger over the past 10 to 20 years, said Delphine Girard, who started teaching in 2004, the year France banned the wearing of Islamic head scarves in schools.

“It's as if the students are the mouthpiece for thinking that does not come from them … but from people who want to impose a religious identity that keeps getting a little stronger.”

The self-censorship takes many forms: from primary school teachers who chose not to read their class the tale of Three Little Pigs for fear of a backlash from some Muslim parents, to history teachers who said they avoid religious satire.

State secularism, or “laicité” is central to France's national identity and demands the separation of religion and public life.

Schools have historical­ly instilled the Republic's values in its citizens — a task some teachers say becomes ever harder as a minority of French Muslims and adherents of other faiths seek to express their religious identity.

“I self-censored a lot on issues around laicité,” said a teacher previously employed at a Paris high school who asked for anonymity for fear of repercussi­ons. “I felt a real hatred for French values.”

Her experience­s meant that while Paty's killing was devastatin­g, it was not entirely a surprise. Recalling the 2015 attack on Charlie Hebdo, she said she had avoided discussing it the next day with her students.

“We held a minute's silence and I moved on. I was cowardly.”

Secularism was enshrined in French law in 1905 after anticleric­al struggles with the Catholic Church.

France's national curriculum sets out the framework and directs teachers toward websites that suggest teaching materials and lesson plans. For lessons on freedom of expression for 13-year-olds, the same class Paty had taught, the Charlie Hebdo cartoons are a common suggestion.

In an emotional tribute to Paty on Wednesday, President Emmanuel Macron said France would defend its values and protect its teachers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada