Charlie Hebdo front cover disrespects all faiths, says Vatican Newspaper

The Vatican newspaper has condemned the French Satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo's latest front cover, which depicts God as an assassin, saying it disrespects all believers, of whatever faith.

The special edition of Charlie Hebdo has published a million copies to commemorate the first anniversary of the terrorist attack at their office which killed 12 people, eight of whom were Charlie Hebdo employees.

The front cover depicts God as a terrorist carrying a machine gun and is accompanied by the caption: "One year on: the assassin still on the run."

The Vatican Newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, said the illustration "is insulting towards faithful of all religions: it is a caricature which is not at all helpful at a time when we need to stand by each other."

Charlie Hebdo had bought into a false narrative that violence in the name of religion is true religion, according to the newspaper, who drew attention instead to number of religious leaders who had rejected violence in the name of religion:

"Behind the deceptive flag of uncompromising secularism, the weekly is forgetting once more what religious leaders of every faith unceasingly repeat to reject violence in the name of religion – using God to justify hatred is a genuine blasphemy, as Pope Francis has said several times," it added.

"In Charlie Hebdo's choice, there is the sad paradox of a world which is more and more sensitive about being politically correct, almost to the point of ridicule, yet does not wish to acknowledge or to respect believers' faith in God, regardless of religion."

Shortly after the Charlie Hebdo attack on 7 January 2015, when brothers Chérif and Saïd Kouachi killed 12 people, Pope Francis condemned the killings.

"To kill in the name of God is an absurdity," Pope Francis said, with a caution that "each religion has its dignity" and "there are limits".

related articles
We must be able to offend, says chair of human rights commission

We must be able to offend, says chair of human rights commission

'I am not Charlie' trends in Russia after 'blasphemous' cartoons published

'I am not Charlie' trends in Russia after 'blasphemous' cartoons published

Terrorists kill and injure dozens in multiple Paris shootings

Terrorists kill and injure dozens in multiple Paris shootings

Charlie Hebdo anniversary: Magazine runs defiant anti-God front page
Charlie Hebdo anniversary: Magazine runs defiant anti-God front page

Charlie Hebdo anniversary: Magazine runs defiant anti-God front page

News
Christian school headteacher, parents spar over 'KPop Demon Hunters'
Christian school headteacher, parents spar over 'KPop Demon Hunters'

Teacher says students are taught to ‘reject evil rather than engage with it’

Kim Kardashian pays $80K to buy Bible her dad gave to OJ Simpson
Kim Kardashian pays $80K to buy Bible her dad gave to OJ Simpson

Reality star and businesswoman Kim Kardashian has revealed that she was the anonymous buyer who spent $80,276 to purchase her late father Robert Kardashian’s Bible, which had once been gifted to former NFL player O.J. Simpson.

Open letter demands Nigerian government do more to end persecution and violence
Open letter demands Nigerian government do more to end persecution and violence

Nigerians have had enough of the government's failure to stop the endless violence.

The triumph of Christianity over the Viking raiders
The triumph of Christianity over the Viking raiders

The Anglo-Saxon Church to negotiate a way forward in a context which, at one time, would have seemed disastrous.