In many countries under the hold of theocrats, like Iran and Afghanistan, being a woman in and of itself is an act of blasphemy, our bodies, hair, eyes, voices. Sitting in the front of the bus reserved for men in a system of sex apartheid: blasphemy. Refusing to wear the compulsory veil or laughing out loud: blasphemy. Being an atheist, gay, apostate or ex-Muslim: blasphemy. Opposing a religious state or the rule of clerics: blasphemy. Celebrating 1 May or 8 March: blasphemy…
The struggle to blaspheme is a struggle for the right to be fully human.
The Haymarket Affair (where a number of workers were killed and four executed in Chicago in 1886 for protesting for an eight-hour day) has become a symbol of the international struggle for workers’ rights with May Day marked worldwide. Likewise, the attack on Charlie Hebdo in January 2015, ten years ago, has become a symbol of the international struggle for the right to free expression and is marked worldwide.
Thank you Charlie for poking fun at Gods, masters and prophets. On this tragic anniversary, we honour you and all our fallen who have challenged the sacred and taboo and changed the world one blasphemy at a time.
#thankyouCharlie
#RireDeDieu
See Inna Shevchenko piece in Charlie Hebdo.