Thousands gather at Republique Square in Paris on Jan 11, 2015, to protest the attack on satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo’s offices.
In the summer of 2005, the far-left writer published an advertisement saying he was having a hard time finding an illustrator to draw the Prophet Muhammad – whose depiction is banned by Sunni Muslims – for a youth book he was writing on Islam’s founder.Flemming Rose, at the time the cultural editor of Denmark’s big conservative daily Jyllands-Posten, took him at his word and invited Danish illustrators to draw Muhammad however they wanted.
“I knew there would be a few extremists, Al-Qaeda especially, that would be angry. But I had no idea it would be a worldwide crisis,” says Bluitgen. For him, the decision to publish the cartoons was a journalistic exercise intended to illustrate the extent of self-censorship when it comes to drawing the prophet.The first country in the world to abolish censorship in 1770, Denmark today tops global rankings when it comes to freedom of expression.
“I always give it a second thought in terms of not provoking too much and being a little more subtle about my ideas,” explains Bob Katzenelson, one of the few who still gives interviews.
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