The horrific terrorist attack in Paris at the office of the French magazine Charlie Hebdo
 is a direct assault on the freedom of speech, thought and expression, 
the fundamentals on which all open, democratic societies are built. Ten 
staff members at the satirical weekly, including four of its top 
cartoonists, were gunned down by masked men who entered the building and
 targeted the editorial meeting in what seemed to be a well-planned and 
professional operation. They left shouting Allahu-Akbar, killing 
two policemen on the street outside before driving off in a getaway car.
 Since 2006, when it first published the Danish cartoons of Prophet 
Mohammed, Charlie Hebdo had been under threat of violent attacks 
by Islamist groups. Refusing to be intimidated, the publication 
continued to caricature Islam even after a firebombing in November 2011,
 just as it also relentlessly lampooned Christianity and Judaism — its 
Christmas week cover caricaturing the birth of Jesus was designed to 
provoke and cause offence. Self-censorship in order not to hurt 
religious sensibilities is now the norm in most parts of the world, so 
too in India, where media and expressions of popular culture including 
cinema, art and writing have to walk the tightrope daily in deference to
 what Salman Rushdie in an interview to this newspaper described as the 
non-existent “right to not be offended”: the fracas caused by Hindutva 
groups against the film PK is the most recent example of this. In truly democratic societies, this should not be the case, and that is what Charlie Hebdo
 believed and practised. Irrespective of what anyone thinks of its 
editorial policy, all who believe in freedom of expression and the 
democratic way of life must express solidarity with the magazine, and 
condemn this unspeakable act of violence against them.
Attacking democratic freedoms is part of a larger agenda. Whether it is 
al-Qaeda, IS or any other group, extremist ideology thrives best in a 
polarised society. If the sizeable numbers of people adhering to the 
Muslim faith have been able to resist Islamism, it is because French 
republicanism has been able to surmount even the most divisive 
controversies, such as the ban on wearing the hijab and niqab in public 
and the Islamophobic discourse by the French right-wing parties that 
surrounded it. While the inevitable security measures will have to be 
taken, it would be most unfortunate if the attack on Charlie Hebdo
 were to give rise to a backlash against French Muslims. That would 
result in precisely what Islamist groups want — an alienated Muslim 
population that would become a recruiting ground for their violent 
cause. Maintaining freedoms and equality before the law in the face of a
 severe challenge to security is the most difficult test for any 
democratic polity and society. 
Editorial article of The Hindu great News paper. 
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