Imagine the strength it would take to return to work only days after your workplace was stormed by gunmen who killed your colleagues and for some reason spared your life. Imagine the courage it would take to honour their legacy by continuing your colleagues’ work. This is what faced Charlie Hebdo’s staff on Friday morning.
They met in the offices of another magazine to finish work on their paper’s next edition, which will be sold worldwide, with proceeds going to the families of the victims.
Libération’s Isabelle Hanne has reported on the first meeting of Charlie Hebdo staff since its offices were attacked in Paris this week. She wrote her story under a Creative Commons licence, welcoming other publications to reprint her reporting. Slate’s translation of Hanne’s article follows.
It comes as it was announced the “survivors’ issue” of Charlie Hebdo coming out next week will also be sold outside France — marking a turnaround for a publication that just a week ago was on the brink of folding.
The French company MLP distributing Charlie Hebdo has done deals with several other press distribution groups, notably Naville in Switzerland and SGEL in Spain, to sell the edition, industry sources said. Negotiations are ongoing with companies in other countries, such as Canada. All money from sales of the issue are to go to the families of the 12 people murdered in the attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices.