Sunday 18 January 2015

France must reach out to young Muslims after the Charlie Hebdo attack

The large numbers of children in mainly Muslim areas of France who refused to observe a minute’s silence for the victims of the Paris terror attacks shows that the country has “serious work to do to avoid a catastrophe”, warns Laurent Cantet, director of an award-winning film set in a multi-ethnic Paris school.
Cantet, who won the Palme d’Or at the 2008 Cannes film festival for The Class – which starred real pupils and staff from a secondary school in the capital’s 20th arrondissement – said he was “not surprised” at the reaction of some young Muslims to the murders of 17 people by three Islamist gunmen, who also died. “There is such a huge social gulf now between these young people and the rest of society,” he said. “It can’t be bridged in a minute’s silence.” Cantet said France had to “look at what’s behind that reaction – at the ghettoes we’ve created, the contempt we’ve instilled. For some of these young people, the only path we’ve left open is a kind of horribly deformed version of their religion they see as a kind of identity card.”
Val says too easy to brush under the carpet, but many schools with Muslim populations in the North of France  refused to have a minutes silence, children being heard saying " they got what they deserved". These youngsters poor, marginalised need to find a sense to their lives otherwise we are heading for disaster.      Comments to taglines82@gmail.com