Philippine Daily Inquirer

Charlie Hebdo now feels abandoned

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PARIS—Charlie Hebdo, the French satirical weekly propelled to global notoriety when its cartoonist­s were shot dead by jihadist gunmen a year ago, fears it has been abandoned in its struggle to “laugh at everything,” one of the survivors of the attack said.

In the wake of the killing of eight of its staff, two policemen and two other men on Jan. 7, 2015, Charlie Hebdo became one of the best-known publicatio­ns in the world and the hashtag #JeSuisChar­lie flashed across social networks.

The newspaper was held up as a symbol of freedom of expression and an astonishin­g 7.5 million copies were sold of the first issue produced by its surviving staff just a week after the attack.

But now those same staff feel they have been left to carry that torch alone, according to the newspaper’s financial director, Eric Portheault, who escaped death by hiding behind his desk when the gunmen stormed in.

“We feel terribly alone. We hoped that others would do satire, too,” he said. “No one wants to join us in this fight because it’s dangerous. You can die doing it.”

Provocativ­e humor

A month before the attack, Charlie Hebdo was close to shutting down as sales had dipped below 30,000. Its brand of provocativ­e, no-holds-barred humor appeared to have gone out of fashion.

Most people were unaware that its staff had been under police protection since it had published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in 2006. In 2011, its offices were firebombed and it was forced to move premises.

Despite the earlier threats, few people can have imagined an attack as bloody as that carried out by jihadist brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi on a quiet street in eastern Paris.

Painful road

The attack—claimed by alQaida’s branch in the Arabian Peninsula—took the lives of Charlie Hebdo’s top cartoonist­s, known by the nicknames Charb, Cabu and Wolinski, and sparked horror across the world.

Donations poured in for the victims, and 200,000 people signed up for a subscripti­on.

But that so-called “survivors’ issue,” featuring the Prophet Mohammad with a tear in his eye on the cover under the title “All is forgiven,” also sparked violent protests in several Muslim countries.

Despite losing many of its key staff, Charlie Hebdo has carried on, producing a 16-page issue each Wednesday of cartoons and drawings that—its creators take pains to point out—poke fun at all religions and politician­s.

‘Sword of Damocles’

But it has been a painful road for the staff left behind, including several who narrowly escaped death, such as cartoonist Laurent Sourisseau, known as Riss, who was seriously injured in the attack.

Riss, 49, took over the management of the paper and became its main shareholde­r. But some staff were unhappy with the new leadership and demanded more transparen­cy in the management of the vast sums donated, to ensure they went to the victims and their families.

The row calmed down, but one of Charlie’s best-known cartoonist­s, Luz, resigned in September, saying he was too traumatize­d by the attack to continue.

“Those we lost left an enormous, monstrous hole,” said Portheault. “Others didn’t want to work with us because they thought it was too dangerous, which is understand­able. We have a Sword of Damocles hanging over our heads.”

No self-censorship

The team of around 20 staff has recently moved into new ultra-secure offices. Unlike the offices that were attacked, the address is a closely guarded secret.

Despite the dangers, the members of the new team say they are determined to continue mercilessl­y poking fun at France and the rest of the world.

“There is no question of selfcensor­ship, otherwise it would mean they (the attackers) have won,” Portheault said.

“If what is happening in the news leads us to draw the Prophet Mohammad again, we would do it,” he added.

Financial war chest

Several of the newspaper’s recent drawings have drawn criticism, especially abroad.

When Riss pictured Aylan, the Syrian toddler found dead on a Turkish beach this year, under a McDonald’s sign in what was intended to be criticism of the consumer society, he was accused of racism.

An exasperate­d Luz even felt compelled to produce an explanatio­n of what a satirical drawing is.

As a result of the attack, Charlie Hebdo now has a hefty financial war chest and a global readership.

No giving up

“We are read by far more people now, who have discovered Charlie’s special type of humor,” said Portheault. One million copies will be printed of the anniversar­y issue but he hopes sales will eventually stabilize around the 100,000mark.

The massive injection of funds has done nothing, however, to heal the staff’s psychologi­cal wounds—and the jihadist attacks in which 130 people were killed in Paris in November made the process of recovery even harder.

“With the Nov. 13 attacks and then the one-year anniversar­y, everything has come back up to the surface,” Portheault said.

“But we won’t give up. We don’t want them to have died for nothing.”

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