Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Silence in France honors teacher beheaded for showing cartoons

- LORI HINNANT Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Rising, Mike Corder and Julhas Alam of The Associated Press.

PARIS — French schools held a nationwide minute of silence Monday in honor of a teacher who was beheaded for opening a class debate on free speech by showing students caricature­s of the prophet of Islam.

Invoking France’s cherished rights of expression and secularism, officials recalled the country’s Enlightenm­ent past as they urged students and teachers alike to look to the future.

Samuel Paty was killed on Oct. 16 outside his school in suburban Paris by an 18-yearold refugee of Chechen origin after Paty showed the caricature­s published by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which triggered a newsroom massacre by extremists in January 2015.

Since their re-publicatio­n in September at the start of the ongoing Paris trial over the killings, France has endured three attacks blamed on Muslim extremists: one by a Pakistani refugee that injured two people outside the newspaper’s old headquarte­rs, the slaying of the schoolteac­her, and a deadly knife attack last Thursday in a church in the Mediterran­ean city of Nice. France’s anti-terrorism prosecutor has opened investigat­ions into all three, and France is now at its highest level of alert.

“Samuel Paty taught each child of the Republic to become a free citizen. For him, for our country, we will continue. It is our honor and our duty,” French Prime Minister Jean Castex wrote in a tweet.

French President Emmanuel Macron has promised to increase protection of schools and churches immediatel­y after the Nice attack, more than doubling the number of soldiers actively deployed in the country. Paty was killed at the beginning of a two-week French school holiday that saw the country declare two states of emergency: one for security and the other for health.

Macron invoked both in a message to students posted on Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat.

“We are living through difficult days, and I want you to recall these few words. You are France! To be French, at school in the Republic, is to learn to be free, to blossom, to rise up by knowledge,” he wrote.

On Monday, the middle school where he taught at Conflans-Saint-Honorine reopened for teachers only. Castex spoke with elementary school students in the town, discussing citizenshi­p and rights before leading them in the national anthem. Other schools throughout the country resumed as usual for both students and teachers.

At schools throughout the country, students listened to readings of the letter of Jean Jaures, a 19th century French thinker and politician, to instructor­s urging them to teach the country’s children to “know France, its geography and its history, its body and its soul.”

The cartoons were originally published in Denmark in 2005 and elsewhere later in countries where freedom of expression is considered inviolable. Charlie Hebdo, the weekly newspaper that reprinted them in 2006 and again this year, regularly lampoons a variety of religious and political leaders, often crudely.

Many Muslims see the caricature­s as sacrilegio­us and protests against France have spread in many countries, including in Bangladesh on Monday, where tens of thousands of Muslims marched in Dhaka chanting “Down with France” and “Boycott French Products” and burning effigies of Macron. In Tehran, Iranian authoritie­s put up at least two enormous billboards against France, including one that named Macron “the devil of Paris.”

 ?? (AP/Thomas Coex) ?? Children raise their hands Monday as French Prime Minister Jean Castex (second left) and Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer (second right) attend an homage to slain history teacher Samuel Paty at a school in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, northwest of Paris. More photos at arkansason­line. com/113silence/
(AP/Thomas Coex) Children raise their hands Monday as French Prime Minister Jean Castex (second left) and Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer (second right) attend an homage to slain history teacher Samuel Paty at a school in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, northwest of Paris. More photos at arkansason­line. com/113silence/

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