3.2. Catholic Zombies
January 11th placed in relief the internal disarray of the left which had continued to gestate since the “Veil Affair” pitting an “old school” Republican left against a “new school” liberal pluralist/culturalist left. For the former, Europe and its tradition of freedom of expression was non-negotiable. For the latter, Europe was plagued by the ghosts of colonialism and its traditions of secularism and freedom of speech risked lapsing into trenchant forms of Islamophobia. In addition, was there a normative ground for something called “Western values” or “Republican values?” In the post-
Charlie days, these camps ceased to engage in simple mediatized intellectual gaming, but morphed into fully fledged orthodoxies vying for positioning in the public discourse and ratcheting up their respective attempts to direct public consciousness. According to Anastasia Colosimo,
Charlie had something of a political “ricochet effect” wherein “the left tears itself apart, find itself blocked in its ambivalence to
progressisme, which it is charged with defending and signals the fictional nature of its supposed unanimity … a Charlie left … a communitarian left … the stakes of the moment would concern the question of alterity, particularly that of Muslims, and its treatment which would over-determine the resurgence of blasphemy” (
Colosimo 2016, pp. 21–22). In effect, the “cartoon debate” was part of a much larger debate or rather the allegorical image of the fractures themselves.
In the hexagon, the fracture(s) reached a point of paroxysm in Emmanuel Todd’s controversial excavation of the event’s real unconscious. The demographer, veering between sociological analysis and investigative journalism, took it upon himself to explain, once and for all, who
Charlie really was. And, according to Todd, he was not what many wanted him to be. The people did not descend onto the streets on January 11th to defend their love of liberty and non-domination. Rather, the ostensible absence of the Arabo-Muslim community and mediatized concatenations of the republican marches compelled Todd to surmise that the event was an imposture, a “Catholic zombie effect” or a totalitarian and neo-populist orgy for a largely Islamophobic and hegemonic white middle class (
Todd 2015, pp. 70–77). In effect, the unconscious of the event and the unconscious of the unconscious was also split between a left
laïcard polarity and a right Catholic polarity who secretly conspired within the rhetorical vacuum that was
Je suis Charlie. Hence, for Todd,
Charlie, like Maastricht, functions in two modes, one conscious and positive, liberal, egalitarian, and republican, and the other, unconscious and negative, authoritarian and non-egalitarian, which dominates and excludes…it is necessary to concentrate our attention on the concrete objectives of the event (January 11th) to understand its latent values. Above all, it was a question of affirming a social power, a type of domination, an objective attained through marching in mass. The identification with the satiric journal Charlie Hebdo reveals a powerful dimension of rejection on the part of the demonstrator. The Republic reconstructs itself through championing the right to blasphemy and applies immediately the obligation to blaspheme on the emblematic personage of a minoritarian religion of a socially excluded group….the violence of the demonstrations of January 11th. Millions of Frenchmen took to the streets and took as the priority of their society the right to spit on the religion of the weak…does Charlie have a relationship to the darkest years of contemporary France?
Todd thus profanes the purported sacrality of January 11th and the aura of its political ritual. Underneath its supposed Islamophobia is furthermore the specter of anti-Semitism and the identification of a “people” with their “religion”, a recipe for the most unsavory of essentialisms, racisms, and xenophobias. Furthermore, regardless of the rhetorical power of its appeals to egalitarianism, the left and the extreme left are complicit with the right and extreme right in their unconscious embrace of the value of non-egalitarianism (
Todd 2015, p. 176). Todd instructs us to be suspicious of the middle class who, despite their cosmopolitan posturing, remain insular and paranoid; they simply cannot “wesh, wesh” with the kids in the
banlieue and this, it would seem, is reason enough to resent them. Finally,
Charlie punched down and while Todd is not problematizing the critique of religion, he is ultimately claiming that irreverence and critique are conditional and contingent. One must never insult the weak or the “victims” regardless of their beliefs and dogmas.
The “Todd effect” unleashed a maelstrom. The Charlie left and the culturalist left lambasted each other as being respectively Islamophobic and Islamo-
gauchiste apologists for terror (i.e., “the attacks were France’s fault” etc.). And if the former were denounced by Todd and co. for unconsciously endorsing the positions of the extreme right, the latter were denounced by the
laïcards for unconsciously collaborating with Islamic extremism and rationalizing terrorism. Caroline Fourest, for instance, reproached Todd for deploying the social sciences and faulty methodology to find excuses for terrorism while also fortifying an “
islamo-gauchisme” that chooses to remain blind to the realities of Islamism; instead, for Fourest, they prefer to pass their time performing an on-going inquisition of secularists who are all unwittingly Islamophobic (
Fourest 2015). One could argue that the Todd effect forecloses the spirit of critique and intellectual rigor and vulgarly confounds appeals to secularism and
laïcité with racism. Beyond this, it was said that Todd insulted the dignity of those who marched, perversely profited from a moment of trauma for self-interested purposes, and committed a type of treason in insinuating that the event was haunted by neo-Vichyist undertones. Fellow demographers also questioned the integrity of Todd’s findings and assailed him for over-determining the absence of Arabo-muslims at the event and unconsciously exacerbating the anxieties concerning their absence/silence (see Harris Interactive/LCP in
Levy 2015). Beyond overlooking the ethnic or “social mixity” of January 11th, Todd’s “simplism” also, according to others, elided the heterogeneity of class at the event where, indeed, the workers were present (see
Corcuff 2016). And as for the “spirit of January 11th”, Luc Rouban’s demography concludes that amongst those who marched, Catholics were in the minority with the majority of demonstrators being anti-Islamophobic, tolerant, and primarily of the left; in fact, as Rouban notes, “the thesis of Emmanuel Todd is contradictory in and of itself. It remains that the general perception of Islam in France is unfavorable, but as our responses indicate, the issue is rather about what Islam represents for the Republic. Nonetheless, our survey shows that Islamophobia is above all present amongst those who did not march” (
Rouban 2015). Space precludes an examination of Todd’s unconscious or that of the culturalist left, but one wonders what interests motivate their ideological agendas and those of their adversaries.
Je suis Charlie’s identity may be a mystery, but perhaps he was more
Charlie than Todd presumed.
Catholics themselves were none too pleased either. Beyond objecting to the appellation “zombie”, many cultural and religious Catholics objected to Todd’s attempt to group them with those who vindicated the right to blasphemy and defended the absolutism of
Charlie’s laïcité. An equal opportunity hater,
Charlie deplored Catholicism and indeed the one time that it lost a defamation case, it followed its decision to publish a caricature of the pope being beheaded. On the one hand, Catholics insisted that there were many species of zombie, including Jewish, Muslim, and Republican. On the other hand, they also asserted that they were not and never were
Charlie. In the midst of the Todd effect, the Catholic newspaper
la Croix, argued that “for Catholics, the valorization of the right to blasphemy and the suspicion of all religious discourse in the public sphere left one bitter. They are divided between a fear of Islam and a fear of
laïcité … the religious, like many other Frenchmen feel less equal than many; perhaps the zombie of January 11th is the Republic” (
La Croix 2015). Roland Hureaux would further draw attention to a growing “non-zombie Catholic fringe” who “identified in no way with
Charlie” and understood January 11th as “not simply a subliminal rejection of Islam, but of all religions” (
Hureaux 2015). And although in the crowds of January 11th, one spotted signs reading
Je suis Juif, Je suis Musulman, Je suis Catholique, Je suis Charlie, the event was hardly an exercise in inter-religious dialogue. And what cannot be ignored was the simple fact that
Charlie’s own political pedigree, anarchist-communist-
laïque, resolutely opposed all religions. January 11th thus also asked the question that continues to plague the Republic; is
laïcité the condition for all religions, as it claims to be, or an alternative to religion which secretly desires to outflank and outbid “traditional religions”. In addition, January 11th did not necessarily reconcile. Rather it produced its own demons in the “non-zombie” fringes epitomized in, for instance, Jean-Marie Le Pen’s clever
détournement of the slogan:
Je suis Charles Martel.
Todd’s myopic obsession with Arabo-Muslim absence/silence also refused to take into account the multitude of global Muslim voices who decried in January 2015, “Not in my name”. It also repudiated, like the mainstream media (who can only enthrall through Manichean oppositions), the existence of an Arabo-Muslim Republican-laïque “fringe” who were Charlie and who deemed Todd’s provocations and the rhetoric of “don’t punch down” to be nothing short of a type of anti-racist racism, a racism with a friendly face. Following from this, Todd unwittingly fixes a group of people in their “ethno-religious” origins and encumbers them with the identitarian and communitarian. Such a discursive elaboration participates in the exclusionary reifying practices that it seeks to combat, all the while scientifically barring the Arabo-Muslim from the symbolic and social processes of integration. The “social question” is corrupted by the “religious question”. In short, in attacking stigmatization, Todd reproduces the performance of stigma in a paternalistic operation. Against Todd, in #Je suis Marianne, Lydia Guirous explains the political ethos of this other fringe as such:
Despite his nice feelings and his programmed revolt, he (
Todd) cannot hide his condescendence to Muslims: a neo-colonial condescendence which drips in all his analyses … The hysteria of certain Muslims at the caricatures of the prophet do not, however, express the thinking of the majority. Todd wants to erect a defense of the indignant Muslim, refusing him to thus be treated as a free subject having the capacity for autonomy. For Mr. Todd, the Muslim is under-developed and cannot understand
laïcité, the Republic, or liberty. In addition, Todd sees nothing wrong with religious fundamentalism, but rejects
laïcité … “a new religion which constitutes a real threat”… He validates a communitarian and multicultural society. And while France has always been a multi-ethic society, it has never been multicultural (
Guirous 2016, pp. 18–20).
Thus, a strange unspoken union may have also taken shape between the radical Islam and politically correct liberals like Todd. Such a silencing of critical voices, both internal and external to the religion itself, not only defers the possibility of a vital and necessary conversation, but freezes the Muslim in a purely religious identity and extricates her from the possibilities, both political and spiritual, promised by spirited public debate and critique/auto-critique.
3.3. The Tears of the Prophet
On January 15th, 2015, Soufiane Zitouni, a professor of philosophy at a high school in Lille and “firstly a French citizen and then someone of Muslim culture”, published an article in
Libération entitled “Today the Prophet is Also Charlie” (
Zitouni 2015a). In a predominantly Muslim classroom, he opted to read the
Hadith against the grain; he told the story of an inconsolable Mohammed whose distress is caused by the fact that he knows that, one day in the future, he will have to testify against his own community. The fable completes itself in February of 2007 where on the cover of
Charlie Hebdo, the sobbing prophet, “overwhelmed by fundamentalists”, appears again uttering “It is hard being loved by idiots”. For Zitouni, it was Cabu, a cartoonist at
Charlie Hebdo, who “relayed the Hadith”. Noting that the ban on images of the Prophet is apocryphal, the professor went on to ask why, pace François Roustang, certain Muslims are incapable of laughter, why certain Muslims entertain a paranoiac rapport with their religiosity which prevents them from getting the joke—how to make a fundamentalist laugh? He concluded his brief allegory with the affirmation that “the prophet, caricatured, insulted, mocked, and, above all ignored, is, today, also
Charlie … Mohammed cries with all the innocent victims of barbarism and ignorance … he asks Allah for forgiveness for all of the sheep who claim his religion without understanding the essence of his message (
Figure 3)” (
Zitouni 2015a). Zitouni found himself immediately ostracized by both his students and his colleagues.
Beyond the “tense ambiance” in the professor’s lounge (where a copy of his article was ingloriously stapled to the wall), Zitouni was subjected to a programmed “counter-attack” by the director of the high school and Sofiane Meziani, a fellow professor of Islamic ethics and supposed Muslim brotherhood sympathizer (
Zitouni 2015b). The latter accused him of cultivating the abject and the racist, stigmatizing Muslims, and demonstrating a blatant lack of respect for his own religion (
Meziani 2015). Simultaneously, he was accosted by a barrage of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories by his students (
Zitouni 2015b) who also charged him with “kissing the feet of the enemies of Islam” (
Vécrin 2015). He concluded that the high school itself, where the texts of the brothers Ramadan littered the bookshelves, was complicit in transmitting Islamism to its own students. Fatigued by the swaths of accusations of ethno-religious treason and the subterranean Koranic atmosphere of the Republican high school, Zitouni’s “blasphemy” would bring him to resign his post, after which he was sued by the high school itself for defamation.
Amongst Zitouni’s ripostes against the high school was the charge of “double speak” and the manner in which it publicly lauded Republican values and laïcité while accommodating and thus advocating the existence of Islamist currents in classroom and in the professor’s lounge. Such double-speak is also broadly representative of the bad faith laden within the discourse of much of the culturalist left where, for instance, following the November 18th anti-terrorist raids in St. Denis, the municipality’s mayor pled ignorance and remarked that St. Denis, hailed by Kepel as the Mecca of France, was a peaceful, multicultural banlieue, known for its great cultural diversity. Zitouni was pushed out of his post for his republicanism. He was pushed out of his post for his refusal to accept the overlapping of the religious and the political. He was pushed out because he pleaded for the blasphemed to tolerate the blasphemer and affirmed that cultural diversity must also be a political and intellectual diversity. His greatest error was his claiming of citizenship, derided by his detractors as “treason”. However, the cultivation of strong forms of equality, and paradoxically the possibility of religious pluralism, may require a bit of treason—the forging of a political community may require the betrayal of (but never completely) one’s class, race, religion, and myth of origins (and this goes for France as well).
3.4. Charlie Coulibaly
The Todd effect was more or less delimited to intellectual debate and the French mediasphere where, as is well known, elites reproduce themselves and attempt to direct the national conversation. However, the afterlives of January 11th were also typified by a host of underground voices and “dissident” fringes who shared Todd’s fundamental theses while reshaping their veracity and provocation. What set the Charlie Hebdo “events” apart from other tragedies was the degree to which their significance was informed by, not simply what happened at Place de la République, but also what happened in the public sphere of the digital world. Unlike the material public sphere, the world of cyber-forums and social media is one of anonymity, distance, and “enabling”. In these virtual folds, the ethical norms of embodied and face-to-face encounters are often dissolved. In the hashtag frenzy of Charlie Hebdo, one was therefore also plunged into various vindications for the terrorist acts, ranging from the complex of ambivalence connoted by #jenesuispascharlie to the fully fledged celebrations of how “they had it coming, they got what they deserved”, expressed in #jesuiscoulibaly/#jesuiskouachi. And beyond these readings was also ISIS’ own coding of the debate.
The attacks against
Charlie Hebdo were not simply acts of jihad designed to avenge the prophet, punish blaspheming “miscreants”, and bring the war for the new caliphate to Europe. They were also intended to exacerbate the already existing tensions between secular Europeans and Muslims with a view to laying the socio-affective foundations for a highly anticipated civil war. They were further motivated by the desire to establish an internal struggle within Islam which would purge the
ummah of moderate elements and those Muslims who adopted European values and protested against Salafism’s regressive tendencies. Stated otherwise, “Charlie” was also about redefining Islam. The specular double of
jihad is
fitna (see
Kepel 2004), the internal purging of the enemies of Islam.
In the February 12th, 2015 edition of ISIS’ glossy “jihadology” rag,
Dabiq, one glimpses two elderly imams holding
Je suis Charlie signs, under which the caption reads: “From Hypocrisy to Apostasy: The Elimination of the Gray Zone”. Islam’s lack of central command is what informs the plurality of its religious practices, but it is simultaneously that which animates the drive, often paranoiac, to establish one definitive recension of the religion, one reading of the one book, and one dogma. An exercise in terror-porn,
Dabiq is a recruitment vehicle and also an ideological arm for
fitna, intended to organize the geopolitical arena into two well-defined camps and recode the social, political, and religious in terms of a cosmic war between the righteous and the infidels. And the infidels are also those Muslims who condemned the Charlie Hebdo attacks. After
Charlie,
the time had come for another event—magnified by the presence of the Khilāfah on the global stage—to further bring division to the world and destroy the grayzone everywhere. One of the first matters renounced by the hypocrites abandoning the grayzone and fleeing to the camp of apostasy and kufr after the operations in Paris is the clear-cut obligation to kill those who mock the Messenger (sallallāhu ‘alayhi wa sallam) … (to kill those) who raise banners and slogans with the words “Je Suis Charlie” on them. There is no doubt that such deeds are apostasy, that those who publicly call to such deeds in the name of Islam and scholarship are from the du’āt (callers) to apostasy, and that there is great reward awaiting the Muslim in the Hereafter if he kills these apostate imams …
Defenders of freedom of speech, regardless of their faiths, are dismissed
tout court as heretics who, lost in the gray zone, secretly defend the “satanic newspaper”
Charlie Hebdo. What is often neglected by media on Islamism is the extent to which its rancor is directed at fellow Muslims, including those killed at
Charlie Hebdo, on November 13th, 2015, and July 14th, 2016. And underneath the play of
jihad and
fitna is the disquieting truth that they are processes defined by both religious convictions and self-aggrandizing tendencies, processes which do not hesitate to accumulate Muslim deaths for the accumulation of theo–political capital. Hence, as Tariq Ali remarks, “we now know that the assault on
Charlie Hebdo was the outcome of intra-Wahhabi rivalry. The attack has been claimed by Ayman al-Zawahiri as an al-Qaida initiative, organized by its section in the Yemen …. His organisation has been outflanked and partially displaced by the Islamic State and a global act of terror was needed to restore its place as the leading terror group” (
Ali 2015).
Charlie was a stratagem and the journal’s sordid reputation in the Islamist world, a mere by-product of a thriving grievance industry designed to serve the needs of dueling muftis.
In unison, #JesuisCharlie would breed its dark dialectical other. French Comic Dieudonné would be amongst the first apostatic voices to “blaspheme” the spirit of January 11th and the civil religion it purported to erect. Fellow traveler of the reformed communist come Le Penist, Alain Soral, who was notorious for his unbridled anti-Americanism, anti-Semitism, and anti-americo-Sionisism, on the evening of the 11th, would post on his Facebook page: “know that tonight, what interests me, is that I feel like
Charlie Coulibaly”. Within a mere 30 min, the post would receive 1938 likes and be shared 137 times (
L’Express 2016). Dieudonné was well aware of what he was doing and deliberately opted to tests the Republic’s own tolerance and engender a debate on the hypocrisies of freedom of expression. In the process, he also knew that his remarks would serve to protract the “fractures”. The Republic was cornered. Would it let the remark pass or “take the bait” and apply its own law forbidding apologies for terrorism. It chose the latter and Dieudonné’s facile provocation, “
un parole de paix”, would oblige many who occupied the gray zone to become full-fledged members of the anti-Charlie camp. For some, the Republic’s sanction of “Charlie Coulibaly” served as proof of the existence of double standards in its policy and its latent Islamophobia and pro-Sionism. Moreover, the subtlety of the phrase and the post lie in its problematization of who the real victim was. But the obvious recurring question that perplexed was why
Charlie had the right and not Dieudonné. According to Cypora Petitjean Cerf, following the scandal, some students in the
banlieue did indeed, “glorify Amedy Coulibaly… the young fans of Coulibaly could easily appropriate his anti-Semitism…as for the recurring question…it is not malicious if we understand the hyper-sensibility of infants and adolescents to injustice” (
Cerf 2015, pp. 56–57). However, this hyper-sensibility also reproduces itself as hyper-sensibility to the imagined virility and violence bound in the mythos of
Charlie Coulibaly, one which offers a compensatory salve to many youth who cannot define their masculinity in terms of the normative pathway of school, work, family etc.
Charlie Coulibaly was thus a mythical sign in which the experience of alienation and exclusion were magically transformed into triumph and belonging. On the other hand, we should also recall that the entire sequence may simply be just another episode in puerile adolescent rebellion.
Soon, the cyber-world was overcome by variations on a theme:
#jenesuispascharlie, #
jesuiscoulibaly, #jesuiskouachi,#che (well-done!) etc. All of these iterations, occupying a spectrum between playful bad taste and real menace, registered en vivo the chasm between the two Frances. Some tweets rendered homage to the heroism of the terrorists and elevated them to the status of celebrities, while others simply noted that
Charlie, racist and Islamophobic, had gone too far and this is what happens when … And there were of course a plethora of “Third ways” and mixed feelings epitomized in the tweets, graffiti, and posters which read “I am not Charlie, I am not a Terrorist, I am Muslim”. The two (or many) Frances would collide in the virtual world in a nexus of posturing, shaming, and sarcastic bloviating. And in between the celebrations of
Charlie’s demise and the super-ego that chided them, a shadow quickly formed over January 11th transmuting its civic religion into an exercise in cynical disavowal. Yet the voices that sought to call into question the purported sanctity of the event were by no means unanimous, homogenous, or entirely Muslim. According to Romain Badouard, there exists three paradigmatic articulations of anti-
Charlie: a “
JesuisCharlie, mais”, which readily criticized all rhetoric of the national Union and saw through the state’s attempt to recuperate French emotion for its own political purposes. This critique generally came from the left and deplored the Republic’s usage of
Charlie as a reason to ramp up national security and reduce civil liberties; the second iteration was a conservative and sincere “
JenesuispasCharlie” coming from, amongst others, “Catholic Zombies” and the extreme religious right; and the third version was that of “ordinary Muslims” who rejected
Charlie on the grounds of racism and Islamophobia (see
Badouard 2016). The former two paradigms were eclipsed by the mediatized preoccupation with the third whose viral-ness was actually negligible in comparison.
3.5. Don’t Laïk …
Nevertheless, one must also remain attentive to the nascent waves of fundamentalist and Islamist political cultures in the banlieues and in France, in general. Although a minority, the radicalized and the radicalizing exist. Regardless of the fact that their “prison Islam”, “internet Islam” or “Islam for idiots” is not representative of the complexity of the religion, it must be recognized as a perverse current of political Islam whose mutations require the greatest of vigilance. It is not without consternation that on a stroll through St. Denis or Aubervilliers, one hears a disconcerting refrain: here Frenchman let you know “you’re no longer in France, you’re in the 93” and in their recoding and reterritorialization of the banlieue as “their’s”, they construct their identities as banlieuesard and often as Muslims against “eux, la française”. Indeed, the world of social media may not be the only map of the complex constellation of faith and feeling that reverberates in the hexagon, home to Europe’s largest Muslim population.
In other words, Charlie has to also be read in synchrony with the larger aesthetic and cultural constellation of the banlieue, including the halalisation of its landscape and the hip hop that forms its soundtrack. Here one sees the “crystallization” of the syncretic, on-line, and modernized Islam of adolescents who fuse the imagined virility of Islam with hip-hop culture and create a unique and, to pastiche Olivier Roy, “de-cultured” version of ‘street Islam’. This new religion is bereft of tradition and transmission. It is obsessed with dogma, not theology. It basks in strict social and political interdictions and leaves no room for fluidity or multiple interpretations. Often it plays between the disparate universes of hip-hop consumption and indulgence (jewelry, cars, dreams of harems of groupies—this is often coupled with anti-Semitism, misogyny, and homophobia) and a religiously militant or “consciousness-based” secondary-coding that responds to the position of second generation Muslims in France. It is the latter that participates in the radicalization process, precisely where the ordinary delinquent becomes a heroic warrior for God. This is the Islam of “generation Grand Theft Auto”.
The French hip hop community was never fond of
Charlie. For the soundtrack to the 2013 film
Le Marche which commemorated and told the story of the 1983 March for Equality and Against Racism (later dubbed the Marche des Beurs), a French rap collective, including legends such as Akhenaton and Kool Shen, contributed the track “Marche”. And here, Nekfu would rail against those “theorists who wanted to silence Islam” and “demand an autodafé for those dogs at Charlie Hebdo”. The staff of
Charlie was simply confused and failed to understand how a group of rappers could take a page out of the play book of the extreme right and use the release of a filmic homage to anti-racism to lash out,
in a communitarian manner, at the historically anti-racist
Charlie (
Le Monde 2013). Following January 11th, the same rappers condemned the
Charlie Hebdo attacks, but did not retract the criticisms expressed in “Marche”.
On January 1, 2015, another rapper, Médine, would release on Youtube the first single from his new album entitled “Don’t Laïk”. A devastating and acerbic critique of French secularism and its proponents, when asked about the song’ significance, the rapper cleverly equivocated: “Don’t Laïk is to
laïque fundamentalists what the
Charlie Hebdo caricatures are to religious fundamentalists” and the previous author of “Blockkk Identitaire” would castigate those other “laïque identitarians” who “march on the streets of Paris next those ultra-laïque movements who decry ‘Islamisation’ (
Médine 2015). And while the rapper may have claimed to be symbolically inverting the spirit of caricature that defined Charlie (
Médine 2015), there was nothing funny about the clip and the lyrics where self-proclaimed “Islamo-racailles (thugs)” who stared menacingly into the camera as Médine called them to: “crucify the laïcards like at Golgotha … If I apply Sharia law, the thieves won’t be able to put their hands up when the cops come … I am cutting down the tree of
laïcité before they put us on the ground…your veil, my sister, in this country its Don’t Laïk … laïcité is only a shadow between the light and the illuminated, we are the scarecrows of the Republic, the elites are the proselytizers and the ultra-
laïque propagandists, I’m good with Allah, don’t need to
laïcise myself … we’re all going to paradise, only if you believe”. The
racaille, previously a lowly delinquent, has now been recast into an anti-republican and anti-secular militant. He is a soldier of God in a celestial war that plays itself out in the streets of European cities. For Médine and his cohorts, religion is “cool:” it is less an order of oppression than something that gives the oppressed the agency to take on their oppressors—a political hermeneutic and powerful place of authority deployed to assail those who are perceived to have excluded you and profane all that they hold sacred. Iconoclasm vs. Iconoclasm in a spiral of provocation and retaliation. The song would become an anthem for many of the disabused who were
JenesuispasCharlie. Furthermore, as Kepel remarks, it would embolden the “profanations of the republican sacred” that circulated on and around January 11th, the evening of which it would receive 1000 viewers with a total of almost a million by the end of the month (
Kepel 2016, pp. 290–91). As a sort of visual-aural supplement to
JenesuispasCharlie and corrosion of the spirit of January 11th, it would counter-blaspheme. In the video’s final moments, Marianne is seen eating tri-colored cake marked Halal (
Figure 4).