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Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Wolinski’s daughter: ‘I don’t think you can kill ideas’ | |
(about 17 hours later) | |
The daughter of one of the cartoonists murdered in the Charlie Hebdo attack has shared a poignant photograph of his empty desk. | The daughter of one of the cartoonists murdered in the Charlie Hebdo attack has shared a poignant photograph of his empty desk. |
The image posted on Instagram by Elsa Wolinski, daughter of Georges Wolinski, shows an office where a pen lies at the ready on a sheaf of paper beside a black notebook. The caption says: “Dad is gone, not Wolinski.” | The image posted on Instagram by Elsa Wolinski, daughter of Georges Wolinski, shows an office where a pen lies at the ready on a sheaf of paper beside a black notebook. The caption says: “Dad is gone, not Wolinski.” |
Her 80-year-old father, known by his last name in France, was shot dead on Wednesday in the offices of the satirical magazine with which he had a long association. Four other cartoonists, including the paper’s editor, were also among the 12 people killed. | Her 80-year-old father, known by his last name in France, was shot dead on Wednesday in the offices of the satirical magazine with which he had a long association. Four other cartoonists, including the paper’s editor, were also among the 12 people killed. |
Elsa Wolinski said on Thursday that the moment she learned that shots had been fired, she feared the worst. Her father, born in Tunisia, always had a pessimistic and melancholy nature, she said. But the most painful thing for her was to imagine him shot dead with a bullet. | Elsa Wolinski said on Thursday that the moment she learned that shots had been fired, she feared the worst. Her father, born in Tunisia, always had a pessimistic and melancholy nature, she said. But the most painful thing for her was to imagine him shot dead with a bullet. |
He had brought her up in the knowledge that he was in a “risky profession” in which he had to defend his ideas. “I thought that you could stop him in the street, show disagreement, but I never thought you could kill artists,” she told an interviewer on Europe1 radio. Fighting back tears, she said: “I don’t think you can kill ideas.” | He had brought her up in the knowledge that he was in a “risky profession” in which he had to defend his ideas. “I thought that you could stop him in the street, show disagreement, but I never thought you could kill artists,” she told an interviewer on Europe1 radio. Fighting back tears, she said: “I don’t think you can kill ideas.” |
She added: “He was a man who was afraid. He was scared of what would happen to society, and of the world he was leaving to his grandchildren.” | She added: “He was a man who was afraid. He was scared of what would happen to society, and of the world he was leaving to his grandchildren.” |
Crowds gathered spontaneously outside the Charlie Hebdo offices on Thursday to pay respect to the victims during a midday minute’s silence. | Crowds gathered spontaneously outside the Charlie Hebdo offices on Thursday to pay respect to the victims during a midday minute’s silence. |
Elsa Wolinski said she had not been informed by police of her father’s death and only learned of it when her husband went to the scene. | Elsa Wolinski said she had not been informed by police of her father’s death and only learned of it when her husband went to the scene. |
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