A week, after the despicable
attack on its office that killed 12 people, the Parisian satirical Charlie
Hebdo, has declared its defiant new edition will feature a cartoon of
the Prophet Muhammad on the cover. Though the cartoon itself is innocuous,
simply featuring the Prophet holding up a sign proclaiming “Je Suis Charlie”
with the words “All is Forgiven” above it, doubtless the cover will lend more
fire to the raging debate over the limits of satire and the freedom of
expression.
Many have seen the attack which killed some of France’s most
prominent cartoonists, as primarily an attack on the principle of free expression. And it has drawn universal
condemnation. However, there has been considerable angst regarding whether this
should be translated or understood as an endorsement of the content that the magazine purveyed.
I am not a reader of the magazine, though English comedian,
actor, writer, presenter, and activist, Stephen Fry has described their
cartoons as bordering on racist and repulsive. However, Frenchman and
self-described “radical left militant” Olivier Tonneau avers
that Charlie Hebdo’s satire falls “well within the French tradition of satire –
and after all was only intended for a French audience. It is only by reading or
seeing it out of context that some cartoons appear as racist or islamophobic.”
Ours is a
profession that thrives on humour at someone else’s expense. Cartoons can be
funny but can also hurt. At their best, cartoons can help to confront and
expose the hypocrisies within society and to chop down the arrogance of power.
At their worst, they can vilify and stereotype entire communities and reduce
complex realities into simplistic vistas.
My first, almost reflexive, reaction was to rush to the
defence of Charlie Hebdo. To declare to all and sundry the obvious. That there
can be no justification for the attack. That cartoonists should be free to
satirize and ridicule whomever and whatever they please without having to fear
for their lives. That religious hypocrisy should not be immune to caricature,
especially when it is loosed from private sphere and presented as a public
obligation. That no one wants to read anodyne satire.
No idea, no matter how cherished and sacred, should be deemed
as sacrosanct. And, as Salman Rushdie, the British Indian novelist and essayist
who was forced into hiding after his book, The Satanic Verses offended
religious zealots, said, “Nobody has the right to not be offended.”
However, it is also undeniable that decent, well-meaning people
from across the religious spectrum, Catholics as well as Muslims, have been
offended by Charlie Hebdo cartoons. And though satirising a religion is not the
same thing as belittling its adherents (any more than ridiculing a political
party’s policies is saying its members are idiots), it is not always a
distinction that everyone accepts.
Ugandan academic, author and political commentator, Prof
Mahmood Mamdani, has spoken
about “the dark side of free speech, its underbelly: how power can
instrumentalize free speech to frame a minority and present it for target
practice.” In discussing the controversy
that erupted after the Danish daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten published
a series of cartoons about the Prophet Mohammed, Mamdani distinguished between between
religion being critiqued from within and coming under attack from without.
Though Prof Mamdani is wrong when he implies that only
believers can legitimately critique religious tradition and that all external lampooning
of it is bigotry, some attacks are undeniably motivated by less than honourable
intentions. And it when confronting this that we should be careful not to throw
out the baby with the bathwater. As he says, compromises circumscribing free
speech are sometimes necessary to keep the peace but these work best when internalized
as civility, rather than when imposed by public power. It is more a question of
how, not if religions can be criticized.
Cartoons do not exist in a vacuum. Our works will be seen
and understood within the context of the historical as well as prevailing
issues and attitudes and we always run the risk of promoting and reinforcing
the very prejudices and oppressions we may be seeking to ridicule. This is
because while the pictures and text are designed to elicit humor when placed in
specific contexts, the meaning they carry is as much a function of the readers’
circumstance as it is the cartoonist’s intent. And it is in the social space
that that meaning is negotiated and determined.
Kenya’s top cartoonist, GADO, fell afoul of this when one of his cartoons from two years ago, which made fun
of Kenyan politicians’ propensity to turn funerals into political rallies, was widely
circulated in the wake of the death of Fidel Castro Odinga, the son of former
Prime Minister, Raila Odinga. Many were outraged by the cartoon which portrayed
the elder Odinga giving a speech while poised atop a coffin. In being
transferred from one context to another, the cartoon acquired a hugely
offensive connotation that had never been intended.
People are thus liable to read their experiences and
contexts into our works. Members of the Muslim community may see the cartoons of the Prophet as a continuation of the racism, stigma and discrimination they have suffered. Others who place them within “the French tradition of
satire” would cast them in a totally different light. Thus, when Charlie Hebdo fired a satirist for alleged anti-Semitic jokes, it was probably reflecting a
general European horror at their historical treatment of Jews. The double
standard illustrates how the competition of contexts and the privileging of one
over another affects the way a cartoon is understood and whether it ends up
offending or amusing.
This, then, places an extra burden on those of us who undertake the risky work of satire. As we skate at the very edge of what society considers tolerable, we must not be oblivious of the choices we are making, the contexts we are privileging and those we are perhaps ignoring. We must realize that we are accountable for those choices and that that, in the end, is the reason we do not really say everything we have the right to say.
One thing we can all agree on is that it is not those who
threaten and carry out violence who should be the ones to set limits on what
can and cannot be said in polite company. In the case of Charlie Hebdo, that is
for its (now global) audience and French society, including its religious
communities and perhaps the French courts where the magazine is regularly sued,
to deliberate. It is a conversation about the relative place of different
communities within the fabric of society and about the relative weight given to
their stories.
There is a hypothetical scenario, brought often up in discussions about limits of the free speech, of somebody shouting out "Fire!" in the middle of a crowded theater causing panic and people stomped to death. Although, that is a legitimate example of free speech limit, the example may not be applied to a pure satire which has a legitimate objective: a protest.
ReplyDeleteA protest of any form should be considered a malicious slander only when there is a proof of a tangible damage it causes. The practical problem with that approach, however, stems from who makes such a judgement. In most of the countries in this world the courts, to very various degrees, are controlled by politicians or even directly by religious leaders. Consequently, the odds of proving some tangible damages, when there are none, are high.
This dilemma has no answer unless we all agree that the justice must function only in the system where suspects, victims, judges, political and financial power and the legal process itself are not entangled. In a mean time, guilty-until-proven-innocent approach will feel much more "righteous" to many of us...
Satire is a genre of literature, and sometimes graphic and performing arts, in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, corporations, government or society itself, into improvement. Therefore, Charlie Hebdo are ok...unless otherwise proven according to law. AND EVEN IF they were wrong, killing the journalists as happened is an extreme response whose "appropriateness" or "proportionality" cannot be justfied. Freedom of expression trumps the sensibilities within such a satirical context...in a country where the laws are largely secular.
ReplyDeleteWould you mind if I reblogged this on my own personal blog? Blogger doesn't seem to have a reblog button. I live in Jamaica and try to share perspectives from Africa in a series called "African Postman." I will of course post the link to your blog. Please let me know, thanks!
ReplyDeletepetchary,
ReplyDeletePlease feel free to reblog.
Thanks all for taking the time to read it.
Mark,
I agree that there is a legitimate public interest in stopping speech that incites violence. However, when there is no proof of that, I do not think it should be the province of government to decide. As in the case of Charlie Hebdo, which was struggling before the massacre, society, when exposed to the full spectrum of opinion, will hopefully coalesce around a standard that overwhelms extreme voices. The challenge is to ensure that the marginalized and oppressed can also be heard and to come to believe that most people are actually not irredeemably stupid, frothing, bloodthirsty, racists/bigots/tribalists.
Yes, Patrick, indeed but this discussion of the free speech better not turn into a West vs East, good vs evil or any other tempting generalization because nobody can fully guarantee proper enforcement of individual rights and abolishment of the marginalized and oppressed. By the default, they exist as such because they are being targeted by some opposing forces.
ReplyDeleteTherefore, targeting the related systemic injustice, as the legitimate satire is entitled to do, shall be never a free ticket for a nonfactual slander. That's why "slander" is a legal term and entirely dependent on the law of the land (which, sadly, is so often absolutely wrong) and not on feelings of individual people unless they can legally prove tangible damages.
Alternative is a French Revolution-like solution, however, that also has a problem: the revolutionaries do not like new revolutions on their own turf. Respectful approach guaranteeing non-engagement (just like not blowing smoke into somebody's else face) might be the only sensible solution here.