File:Charlie Hebdo, No. 1057, 19 September 2012, page 16 - Muhammad cartoons.jpg
Charlie_Hebdo,_No._1057,_19_September_2012,_page_16_-_Muhammad_cartoons.jpg (273 × 365 pixels, file size: 93 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary
[edit]Description | Cartoons of prophet Muhammad by French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, on page 16 of No. 1057, 19 September 2012. The cartoons were part of a series mocking the Islamist reaction to the anti-Islam YouTube video The Innocence of Muslims, released earlier that year, during which angry mobs perpetrated numerous acts of violence, including the storming of the American embassy in Benghazi and the lynching of the US ambassador to Libya, J. Christopher Stevens. Because of the history of jihadist attacks and Islamist campaigns to prevent or punish publication, or republication, of material considered blasphemous by Muslims, one of these cartoons was used to illustrate the civics lessons on freedom of expression required by the French national school curriculum. A teacher in a school in Paris, Samuel Paty, was decapitated by a jihadist in October 2020 as a result of an extremist social media campaign by an Islamist imam and a Muslim parent of an uninvolved school pupil, after having used one of these cartoons in his lessons. The murderer, Abdullakh Anzorov, was shot dead immediately after posting on Twitter pictures of Paty's severed head and taunting Emmanuel Macron, the French president, for allowing freedom of the press. |
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Author or copyright owner |
Charlie Hebdo |
Source (WP:NFCC#4) | Image published at: Read, Max, "What Is Charlie Hebdo? The Cartoons that Made the French Paper Infamous" Gawker, 2015-01-07, 10:35AM. Available at: https://gawker.com/what-is-charlie-hebdo-and-why-a-mostly-complete-histo-1677959168 |
Date of publication | 2012-09-19 |
Use in article (WP:NFCC#7) | Murder of Samuel Paty |
Purpose of use in article (WP:NFCC#8) | To support encyclopedic discussion of this work in this article. The illustration is specifically needed to support the following point(s): The alleged offensiveness of the image was used as justification for the murder and for the sympathy for the murderer. The images subsequently involved in classes on freedom of speech in France were republished by global media in a gesture of solidarity for the right of free expression. The image also illustrates the fact the images shown are simple cartoons and not, as was claimed by the attack's instigators and their apologists, a pornographic photograph of a man labelled as Muhammad. |
Not replaceable with free media because (WP:NFCC#1) |
n.a. |
Minimal use (WP:NFCC#3) | The image shows the whole page of the tabloid paper at low resolution, and includes all the relevant designs of cartoon. |
Respect for commercial opportunities (WP:NFCC#2) |
n.a. |
Other information | See WP:NOTCENSORED for policy on using images thought to offend conservative religious probity. |
Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of Murder of Samuel Paty//wiki.riteme.site/wiki/File:Charlie_Hebdo,_No._1057,_19_September_2012,_page_16_-_Muhammad_cartoons.jpgtrue |
Licensing
[edit]This image represents a two-dimensional work of art, such as a drawing, painting, print, or similar creation. The copyright for this image is likely owned by either the artist who created it, the individual who commissioned the work, or their legal heirs. It is believed that the use of low-resolution images of artworks:
qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. Any other use of this image, whether on Wikipedia or elsewhere, could potentially constitute a copyright infringement. For further information, please refer to Wikipedia's guidelines on non-free content. | |||
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File history
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 17:37, 4 December 2020 | 273 × 365 (93 KB) | DatBot (talk | contribs) | Reduce size of non-free image (BOT - disable) | |
06:21, 22 November 2020 | No thumbnail | 800 × 1,067 (191 KB) | GPinkerton (talk | contribs) | Uploading a non-free work, as object of commentary using File Upload Wizard |
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