Charlie Hebdo cartoons on migrants stirring controversy

tay

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“Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

A wave of indignation has swept across social media after Charlie Hebdo mocked the drowning of Syrian toddler Aylan Kurdi in a perilous journey across the Mediterranean. The poster showed Jesus walking on water with the dead Muslim boy next to him.

The first page of the new cartoon, dubbed ‘Welcome, migrants’ features a gruesome picture of the drowned three-year-old lying face down on the beach. “So Close to the Goal,” the caption reads in French.

Near the body is a billboard advertising the famous 2-for-1 McDonald’s Happy Meal with a smiling face of the restaurant chain’s clown mascot. “Two children’s menus for the price of one,” it says.

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JeSuisCharlie now? Social media outrage at cartoon mocking death of Syrian toddler Aylan Kurdi — RT News
 

Walter

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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

Some don't know humour.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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May 28, 2007
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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

Satire is satire. Once can appreciate 22 minutes or Mercer without sharing their slant for example. And some times humorists miss.
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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Yes, it's a satirical magazine. That's what it does. Charlie Hebdo stirs new controversy with migrant cartoons http://reut.rs/1MpcNX6



"So close to making it..."

Charlie Hebdo cartoons on migrants stirring controversy | News
 

Twila

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Mar 26, 2003
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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

satire
[sat-ahyuh r]
Spell Syllables
Synonyms Examples Word Origin
noun
1.
the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice folly, etc.
2.
a literary composition, in verse or prose, in which human folly and vice are held up to scorn, derision, or ridicule.
3.
a literary genre comprising such compositions.

It's important to know the meaning of the word satire. It does not imply humour. They are not saying it is funny nor are they making fun of poor little Alan nor any Syrian.
 

Serryah

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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

Ugh; I'm all for free speech but this kind'a thing is disgusting. Doesn't matter what their 'point' is; people died, including kids and they're using that fact to prove that they're just a$$holes. This isn't free speech, this is baiting retaliation on them, again, for crossing an effin' line.
 

Twila

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Mar 26, 2003
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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

Ugh; I'm all for free speech but this kind'a thing is disgusting. Doesn't matter what their 'point' is; people died, including kids and they're using that fact to prove that they're just a$$holes. This isn't free speech, this is baiting retaliation on them, again, for crossing an effin' line.

oh, I saw it differently. I thought they were making commentary on the horrificness of what this family had to go through for us to "see". I viewed the cartoon as showing the desperation of the Syrians juxtaposed against the blase attitude towards the horrors UNTIL this poor little boy washed ashore and everybody became suddenly outraged.

I guess it's all up to interpretation.
 

Serryah

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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

oh, I saw it differently. I thought they were making commentary on the horrificness of what this family had to go through for us to "see". I viewed the cartoon as showing the desperation of the Syrians juxtaposed against the blase attitude towards the horrors UNTIL this poor little boy washed ashore and everybody became suddenly outraged.

I guess it's all up to interpretation.

I saw this mentioned elsewhere too and looking at it from that pov, it does make sense. I just never thought of these people actually being sympathetic really considering their previous cartoons.
 

darkbeaver

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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

I saw this mentioned elsewhere too and looking at it from that pov, it does make sense. I just never thought of these people actually being sympathetic really considering their previous cartoons.

They aren't sympathetic, they're psycopathic.
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

I saw this mentioned elsewhere too and looking at it from that pov, it does make sense. I just never thought of these people actually being sympathetic really considering their previous cartoons.

I wouldn't say they are sympathetic. I think they see the world, it's horrors and the inhabitants lack of caring in a more stark light. It's a form of art (art imitating life) but with a message. Like Banksy's art ( Banksy Street Art https://www.google.ca/search?q=bank...KEwiHh-nn-fnHAhXXGJIKHYSOAOU&biw=1230&bih=663). Its' meant to get you to think about what you're seeing and how you currently feel about it.
 
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captain morgan

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Re: “Christians walk on water… Muslims kids sink,”

Ugh; I'm all for free speech but this kind'a thing is disgusting. Doesn't matter what their 'point' is; people died, including kids and they're using that fact to prove that they're just a$$holes. This isn't free speech, this is baiting retaliation on them, again, for crossing an effin' line.

Ya hit the nail square on the head, however, considering that Charlie Hebdo was the victim of an horrific attack some time ago, I guess that I am not too surprised that they are not terribly sympathetic towards Middle East issues
 
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MHz

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Those 'Gingers' always seem to look like they have been rode hard and put up wet.

I doubt many migrants in rickety boats saw the edition. Considering the poster in the background the child is probably a steak or burger already.
 

spaminator

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Charlie Hebdo cartoon of dead Syrian toddler draws outrage
Geordon Omand, THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Thursday, January 14, 2016 05:03 PM EST | Updated: Thursday, January 14, 2016 09:30 PM EST
VANCOUVER -- An inflammatory cartoon picturing a drowned Syrian toddler and predicting his future as a sex offender in Germany is "disgusting," says the boy's aunt.
Tima Kurdi said she was brought to tears when she saw the depiction of her two-year-old nephew Alan Kurdi's lifeless body in the controversial French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.
The cartoon asks in French what would have become of the boy had he grown up. It shows two men running after screaming women with their tongues hanging out and hands outstretched above a caption that reads, also in French, bum grabbers in Germany.
The drawing refers to a series of sex attacks allegedly committed by a large group of migrants in Cologne, Germany, on New Year's Eve.
The toddler drowned, along with his mother and older brother, while crossing the Mediterranean en route to Europe last September.
A photo of the boy's body lying face down on a Turkish beach made the front page of newspapers across the world and stoked global outrage over the Syrian refugee crisis.
"This is really painful, to use that innocent boy's picture. It went too far," Kurdi said in an interview from suburban Vancouver on Thursday.
"We're trying to move on. Why do they want to bring the pain back to us?"
The boy has been widely reported as being three years old, but Kurdi clarified on Thursday that he was two when he died.
Kurdi has been an outspoken advocate for Syrian refugees since the death of her extended family members. She helped sponsor her other brother, Mohammad, and his family, who arrived in Canada late last year.
Long-time British Columbian political cartoonist Adrian Raeside said he believes the newspaper's use of Alan's image was unnecessary and denigrates the work of editorial cartoonists.
"To be honest, that's way beyond what anyone should do. A dead kid? I mean, come on," Raeside said, emphasizing this was his personal opinion.
"I hope that this doesn't give editorial cartoonists a bad name."
Raeside spoke about his own policy of showcasing only people who willingly enter the public domain, leaving out those connected unintentionally.
"I don't draw cartoons about some politician's wife. That's not her fault that her husband's in politics," he said.
"Some politician's kids? That's not their fault that their father is the prime minister."
The cartoon comes about a year after gunmen stormed Charlie Hebdo's offices in Paris and killed 12 people over the newspaper's incendiary depictions of the Muslim prophet Muhammad.
While the publication stirred controversy and sparked acrimony online, Micheal Vonn of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association said that this anger is an unfortunate but natural result of the importance and protection our society places on freedom of expression.
"People will inevitably be offended," Vonn said. "(But) just because they're offended doesn't mean that they don't have a perfect right to be."
Charlie Hebdo is exercising its legal right to expression, and at the same time those decrying the publication are exercising that same right, Vonn said.
Cara Zwibel of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association added that a society that values freedom of expression has to take the good with the bad.
"This cartoon is remarkably offensive on a whole number of levels -- at a grand societal level and also at the very personal level for people actually involved in this tragedy," she said, adding that there's something in the drawing to offend almost everyone.
She predicted the cartoon would not qualify for sanction under Canada's hate-crime laws, which she described as having a very high threshold.
Zwibel also observed the speed of social media today means counter-speech and contrary perspectives are able to mobilize quickly.
The aunt of a young Syrian boy who drowned last year while crossing the Mediterranean says an inflammatory cartoon, shown in a screengrab, showcasing her nephew's lifeless body is "disgusting." Tima Kurdi took to Twitter to criticize the controversial French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo for its depiction of toddler Alan Kurdi. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO

Charlie Hebdo cartoon of dead Syrian toddler draws outrage | World | News | Toro