French pupils remember slain teacher as anti-Macron protests persist
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[November 02, 2020]
PARIS (Reuters) - Schools across
France held a minute's silence on Monday in memory of Samuel Paty, the
teacher beheaded by a Chechen teenager who wanted to avenge his use of
cartoons mocking the Prophet Mohammad during a class on freedom of
expression.
With France at its highest security level following further attacks
since Paty's killing on Oct. 16, some 12 million pupils returned to
school for the first time since the 47-year-old was slain in broad
daylight on the eve of a two-week school holiday.
President Emmanuel Macron cast the killing as an attack on French values
and the Republic itself. But his insistence that France will not
compromise on basic freedoms of belief and expression has provoked
outcry among Muslims worldwide.
"The idea of terrorism is to create hatred," Macron wrote in a message
to schoolchildren on social media. "We will pull through this together."
Pupils stood in silence at 11 a.m. and teachers reminded them of their
rights and duties in a "free democracy".
Prime Minister Jean Castex marked the tribute alongside staff at the Le
Bois d'Aulne college where Paty taught. Police guarded the gates of the
high school, which remains closed to pupils until Tuesday.
Macron has described Paty as a "quiet hero" dedicated to instilling the
values of the Republic in his pupils and the embodiment of France's
"desire to break the will of the terrorists".
PROTESTS
Teachers across France read a letter written to their profession by Jean
Jaures in which the 19th century politician set out their role in
nurturing young citizens.
"They will be citizens and they must know what a free democracy is, what
rights confers on them, what duties the sovereignty of the nation
imposes on them," Jaures wrote.
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A woman holds her child by the hand on their way to the school in
the area around the Bois d'Aulne college where Samuel Paty, the
French teacher, was beheaded on the streets of the Paris suburb of
Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, France, November 2, 2020. REUTERS/Benoit
Tessier
France has deployed extra soldiers to protect places of worship and
schools following further attacks since Paty's killing, including in
a church in Nice and against a priest in Lyon.
Paty's macabre murder convulsed secular France, where the separation
of church and state is fiercely defended by many. It also exposed
the fault lines cleaving a country where some Muslims see the
government's use of secular laws as a tool to suppress their
expression of religious beliefs.
Macron has enraged Muslims around the globe by describing Islam as
"a religion in crisis all over the world" and defending free speech
that some deem blasphemous or inflammatory.
On Monday, thousands protested outside the French embassy in Jakarta
carrying banners calling Macron the "real terrorist".
In Bangladesh, supporters of the Islamic group Hefazat-e-Islam
(Protectors of Islam) used their shoes to beat up a poster bearing
Macron's photograph as thousands marched on the embassy in Dhaka.
"We will boycott French goods," said Muslim devotee Rakibul Islam.
(Reporting by Richard Lough; Editing by Giles Elgood and Susan
Fenton)
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