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Samuel Paty, a high school history teacher, was killed on an open street in a Paris suburb by an Islamist terrorist last October. The perpetrator of the brutal execution was shot dead by the police on the spot. All of this came after the 47-year-old teacher allegedly denigrated his Muslim students and the Prophet Muhammad in one of his classes for denouncing a student’s father and launching an Internet campaign against her.
The schoolgirl’s “experience account” was now officially a lie. Due to his behavioral problems, the 13-year-old, who was already threatened with revulsion at the time of the events, was not present at that particular time. The student’s lawyer, who is currently in preventive detention, said yesterday that his protégé was under enormous pressure, sniffed at the facts, and his classmates were constantly sleeping to defend the expulsion campaign against the teacher.
Six more instigators are now also charged, including several classmates and the student’s father. According to the prosecution, there was a direct and clear link between the deliberate mood of the Internet and the vile tragedy.
What really happened?
Samuel Paty has followed the same course on the relationship between free speech and profanity for years. In describing the subject’s inevitable French national tragedy, the Charlie Hebdo massacre, he warned the group beforehand that if the subject could violate someone’s worldview, they could safely skip this part, leave the class, because the newspaper’s Mohamed cartoons satirical would also come out.
This episode was twisted by the student in the lawsuit (as he now admitted: solely on the basis of a malicious rumor) in which the history teacher excluded Muslim students from his class and then insulted their faith at will. From here, events escaped, followers of radical Islam continued to lurk in the online space, while a 17-year-old Chechen jihadist approached Samuel Paty and yelled and beheaded Allahu Akbar in front of the school building.
Macron bekeményített
In France, the secular state and freedom of expression are the most important pillars of national self-awareness, so President Emmanuel Macron did not hesitate to call the murder of teachers an Islamist terrorist attack and ordered a national day of mourning in honor. to the victim. . And Samuel Paty donated the Order of Honor of the French Republic to his family.
Meanwhile, the French Interior Minister has started talks with community platform owners about possible ways to combat cyber-Islamism so that a similar murderous campaign never happens again. Macron hopes that the case, which is shaking the world, can give new impetus to the legislative fight against religious hatred.
After it was revealed that the Pantini mosque, near Paris, was also involved in creating the mood against the murdered history professor, the government closed it for half a year. A total of 76 mosques were projected to definitively eradicate activism contrary to the ideals of the republic (18 cases required immediate intervention). Denominational schools also came under tighter control by the government.
In parallel, Emmanuel Macron drafted a charter of values with Muslim religious leaders in France in January, stating that
Islam can only see itself as a religion in France and therefore as a private way of seeking God, and not as a political movement.
The treaty also states that no religious belief can be exempted from the observance of secular law (that is, the French constitution).
All this is important because from now on, the signatories will be easily sanctioned for violating their agreement with the French state. The French president would also ban the reception of preachers from abroad (that is, paid) in the future, and preachers already there, mainly from Algeria, Morocco and Turkey, will be expelled from the country by the authorities. There could be about 300 of them.
Five of the top eight Muslim organizations in France have so far signed the Macron Charter of Values. When asked by the press what would happen to the remaining three, a spokesman for the president replied:
We are sure they will eventually sign, but if they don’t we will respond accordingly.
(Cover image: People in Conflans Saint-Honorine are the scene of the murder they look at the flowers placed in front of. Photo: Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)
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