View allAll Photos Tagged JeSuisCharlie
C'est le restaurant où actuellement j'expose mes photos.
Pris un peu en décalé.
Comme d'hab!!
Bon dimanche à tous et soyons tous Charlie en ce jour de recueillement.
Laugh at all is not a question for comedians; laugh amalgam between beard and soldier is a thing of the past; the message is the humor that kills; this is the case and we are united. God is a matter outside murderers soldiers. The real debate is education and the role of parents in a changing world.
Attentato a Charlie Ebdo, ne parliamo su Mondivirtuali: www.mondivirtuali.it/virtual/2015/01/08/charlie-ebdo
Hello, je fais enfin cette photo!
Je voulais a tout prix la faire, parce que je veux soutenir les familles des victimes et la libèrté d'expression! Je suis dans une classe de "journalisme" et la liberté d'expression c'est hyper important, pour le journalites, et pour tout le monde! La liberté d'expression est précieuse.
#2565 - 2015 Day 8: The principle of free speech applies to us all, whether we speak, draw, write, paint or make photographs. I have a very dear friend who cartoons for disability rights and equality; for him and all those affected in Paris, Je suis Charlie, nous sommes Charlie ...
When there are so many bad apples, there's something wrong with the orchard!
Real Time with Bill Maher: Je Suis Charlie -- January 9, 2015 (HBO)
Bill Maher and panelists Salman Rushdie, Carly Fiorina and Paul Begala discuss the recent terror attacks in France.
RealTime Published on Jan 9, 2015
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Cartoon by Lucille Clerc -Break one, thousand will rise !
Prayers for the victims and their families ~~~
Terrorism must not win~~~
WE ARE ALL CHARLIE !
Rest in Peace
The twelve victims of the attack have been identified. They are:
Charb – whose real name was Stephane Charbonnier, 47, artist and publisher of Charlie Hebdo.
Cabu – whose real name was Jean Cabut, 76, Charlie Hebdo’s lead cartoonist. Honoured with the Legion of Honour, France’s highest decoration, in 2005.
Georges Wolinski – Tuinisian born artist, 80. Had been drawing cartoons since the 1960s, and worked for Hara-Kiri, a satirical magazine considered a forerunner to Charlie Hebdo.
Tignous – whose real name was Bernard Verlhac, 57, was a member of a group of artists called ‘Cartoonists for Peace’.
Bernard Maris – known as ‘Uncle Bernard’, 68, was an economist and wrote a regular column for Charlie Hebdo.
Honore – Phillipe Honore, 73, cartoonist, who had worked for Charlie Hebdo since 1992. He was the artist who drew the last cartoon tweeted by the weekly only moments before the massacre. The cartoon shows the leader of the Islamic State and the Levant (ISIS), Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, presenting his New Year message saying “and especially good health!”
Michel Renaud – a former journalist and political staffer who had founded a cultural festival. He was visiting the Charlie Hebdo offices from Clermont-Ferrard.
Mustapha Ourrad – a copy editor for Charlie Hebdo. Of Algerian descent.
Elsa Cayat – Charlie Hebdo analyst and columnist.
Frederic Boisseau – building maintenance worker.
Franck Brinsolaro – 49-year-old policeman appointed to head security detail for Charb. He was the father of a one-year-old daughter.
Merabet Ahmed - 42 and a French Muslim. A police officer and member of the 11th arrondissement brigade.
Je veux rester un homme libre
Je veux pouvoir choisir ce que je vois, ce que j'écoute, ce que je lis
Je suis Charlie
I want to remain a free man
I want to choose what I see, what I hear, what I read
I'm Charlie