Charlie Hebdo Recent Cartoon
Centre page on the cover is a cartoon of the prophet drawn by jean cabut.
Charlie hebdo recent cartoon. Twelve people were killed in an attack by islamist gunmen on charlie hebdo s office in paris on january 7 2015. Charlie hebdo gained notoriety in 2006 for its portrayal of a sobbing muhammad under the headline mahomet débordé par les intégristes muhammad overwhelmed by fundamentalists. Since the start of the trial and with the republication of the cartoons we have received all kinds of horrors including threats from al qaeda and calls to finish the work of the gunmen from the 2015 attack she said. The publication irreverent and stridently non conformist in tone is strongly secularist antireligious and left wing publishing articles that mock catholicism judaism islam and various other groups as local and world news unfolds.
French for charlie weekly is a french satirical weekly newspaper that features cartoons reports polemics and jokes. Charlie hebdo has responded in its latest issue by republishing a dozen of the mocking drawings which depict the prophet. The latest charlie hebdo cover shows a dozen cartoons first published by the danish daily jyllands posten in 2005 and then reprinted by the french weekly in 2006 unleashing a storm of anger across the muslim world. Muslims across the world including iran indonesia pakistan yemen nigeria and france have taken to the streets in recent days to protest french satirical magazine charlie hebdo s republication of a series of blasphemous cartoon depictions of the prophet muhammad the central figure of the islamic faith.
The latest charlie hebdo cover shows a dozen cartoons first published by the danish daily jyllands posten in 2005 and then reprinted by the french weekly in 2006 provoking outrage across the. The attack comes after charlie hebdo republished controversial cartoons of the prophet muhammad to mark the start of a trial of suspected accomplices of terrorist gunmen who attacked its offices. Charlie hebdo known for its irreverent humour and absolutist belief in free speech has repeatedly stirred anger in the islamic world by publishing cartoons of the prophet muhammed. Many muslims consider any physical depiction of their prophet to be blasphemous.
Charlie hebdo ʃaʁli ɛbdo.