French Muslims
disgusted by the shootings in Paris may nonetheless have reasons for not
embracing the slogan "I am Charlie".
"For a Muslim, the Prophet Muhammad is
more important than their own parents," says the young man I meet in
Sarcelles, his face twisted with contempt for the caricatures Charlie Hebdo
published.
His friend, also 18, nods in agreement as we
stand on a street in this Paris dormitory town, famous in France for its large
Sephardic Jewish community.
"They were warned but they kept on
mocking the prophet," he continues. "But you cannot kill for that.
You cannot go against press freedom in France. Still, they will have to answer
to God."
"Real Muslims condemn these
attacks," adds a third man, 22 and also Muslim. "Those who committed
them were insane. The attack on the kosher supermarket was a catastrophe for
France and for the world. If you kill one man it is like you kill all of
humanity. That is how we think." We stand chatting openly on the pavement
but nobody wants to be identified.
French
values
Mistrust
of the media runs deep since an outburst of violence last July when police held
rioters back from entering the town's Jewish area as they raged at Israel's bombardment
of Gaza.
An invisible line marks the beginning of the
Jewish area on Avenue Paul Valery, scene of the confrontation with the police.
It starts just before a Holocaust monument and a synagogue.
There is no sign of trouble but it has been
guarded by CRS riot police since last week.
David, a kosher businessman I encounter, is so
dismayed by the deterioration he perceives in community relations in France
that he foresees a time when the "great majority" of its half-million
or so Jews will emigrate.
But the Muslim teenager accuses French media
of exaggerating the divisions in Sarcelles, where Jews now make up about a
quarter of the 60,000-strong population. "We say one thing, you might
write another," he suggests, smiling.
When I ask how he and his friends relate to
the town's Jewish community, they say they have Jewish friends and
"nothing has changed". "Mosques get attacked but that doesn't
make the news," he adds.
The older of the three speaks with real warmth of the French
values of liberty, equality and fraternity which were schooled into him. "When
I go on holiday to Morocco, I know I could never live there because people make
me feel French," he says of his ancestral country. "But in France I
am made to feel Moroccan," he adds.
"Am
I going up to the Jewish area?" asks the younger man. The Jews got the
nice part of Sarcelles, he explains, a little sourly, while we got this,
gesturing back to the long blocks of uniform five-storey council flats
stretching down to the railway station. Actually, there was a time when Jewish
immigrants from the former French colonies lived there themselves in numbers,
and some Jews still do, but the demographic has changed.
'Provocations'
A
Tunisian Muslim pensioner I meet gives two reasons why he shunned Sunday's
national unity march in Paris, while condemning the attacks. Like the
teenagers, he is indignant at the cartoons Charlie Hebdo published: "It
set out to provoke people for its own amusement.
"It attacked their religion. Make fun of
yourselves if you will, but leave others alone. The media is like a car: you
need to have a licence to be on the road, otherwise you will be a danger to
others. Charlie had no licence to put people's lives at risk with their
provocations."
His other reason is the presence at the march
of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu whom he calls "the biggest
terrorist in the world" because of the Gaza conflict. He insists he is not
anti-Jewish, saying he had Jewish friends back in Tunisia.
'Nobody safe'
Another
Muslim pensioner I meet separately, a man from Morocco, says he has Jewish
friends too, here in France, men he will "have a coffee or beer
with".
He takes a rather detached view of Charlie
Hebdo, dismissing it as a fringe paper he never wanted to read. "But I am
200% in support of freedom of expression," he declares.
More Muslims might have attended the march had
they not felt "shame", he suggests, at the actions of gunmen claiming
to defend Islam. "Muslims may also fear retaliation by jihadists if they
take to the streets," he adds. He himself is uneasy after the attacks.
"Nobody is safe now," he says before directing me to the nearest tram
stop.
As my tram glides out of Sarcelles, I reflect
that I have not seen a single "I am Charlie" poster or pencil symbol
since my arrival yet the quiet battle of ideas here is no less intense than in
Paris itself.
By Patrick Jackson, BBC News, Sarcelles,, 13 January 2015 Last updated at 05:03.
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