Charlie Hebdo and the Horrible History of Suppressing 'Blasphemy'
An unwelcome blast from France's oppressive past.
A tragedy in France, involving savage retaliation for mockery of religion, shocks public opinion and pits medieval barbarism against liberal Enlightenment values. Recent headlines? No, an eighteenth-century drama that unfolded in the Age of Enlightenment itself and culminated in the judicial murder of a young man named François-Jean de la Barre, who became the last person executed for blasphemy in Europe.
As it happens, this year marks the 250th anniversary of l'affaire de la Barre. For a long time, this tragic tale was a distant chapter in the story of Western civilization's road to a secular, pluralistic society; the issues it raised had long been settled in favor of freedom of speech. In a 1998 essay on the de la Barre case, French historian Elisabeth Claverie wrote that these questions had ben infused with "a renewed vigor" by the fatwa against Salman Rushdie for his novel, The Satanic Verses. Claverie could hardly have guessed that in less than two decades, twelve people—artists and journalists from the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo—would be killed in the heart of Paris for perceived blasphemy against Islam.
Of course, a terrorist attack is very different from a (nominally) lawful execution. Still, in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo massacre, the de la Barre case seems startlingly relevant to present-day events. Then as now, the war on blasphemy was in some ways less about faith than about political and social conflict; then as now, the narrative of free thought versus religious tyranny was complicated by thorny issues of power and privilege. And, then and now, what happened was still, ultimately, a stark lesson in the evil of religious orthodoxy imposed by force.
The de la Barre affair was set in motion in August 1765, when the wooden crucifix on the main bridge in the city of Abbeville was vandalized during the night; someone repeatedly slashed it with a saber or a large knife, leaving several scratches. News of the sacrilege spread quickly, and pious townsfolk flocked to the site to express their horror. The next day, the bishop of Amiens arrived at the Abbeville bridge, a procession of clergy in tow; he came barefoot, with a rope around his neck in sign of penance, and delivered a fiery sermon declaring the culprits worthy of "the worst punishments in this world and eternal torment in the next." Simon Linguet, the advocate for de la Barre and his codefendants, later wrote in a brief that the bishop's dramatic appearance had such an inflammatory effect that for days, "the town talked of nothing" but the attack on the cross.
As the authorities opened an investigation—overseen personally by the procurator general of the parliament of Paris, Joly de Fleury—they were under tremendous pressure to find the perpetrators. While no one seemed to have any information on the actual crime, people did come forward with reports of various unrelated impieties—which were treated as possible leads, on the assumption that the suspect would be found among those who had shown disrespect for religion.
Several such reports concerned the Chevalier de la Barre, a 19-year-old destitute nobleman who had moved to Abbeville two years earlier after his father's death; a cousin, the abbess of the town's Willancourt convent, had given him lodgings on convent property outside the cloisters. A weapons instructor to whose school de la Barre came regularly for shooting practice claimed that the chevalier and two of his friends had bragged and laughed about watching a procession carrying the Eucharist go by without kneeling or removing their hats. Other witnesses—a wigmaker, the convent doorkeeper, a servant—told more damaging stories. De La Barre, they said, had sung filthy blasphemous songs, openly flaunted his godlessness and declared that God and the saints were fairy-tales for fools, uttered obscene mock blessings over food and wine, and even expressed a desire to buy a plaster crucifix just so he could smash it.
A search of de la Barre's rooms uncovered a trove of forbidden literature, mostly erotic novels with illustrations—including a book titled Venus in the Cloister, or The Nun in Her Shift that mixed pornography with dialogue questioning church doctrine on sex—but also a copy of Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary, banned the previous year. On October 1, de la Barre was arrested. Charges were brought against two of his friends as well; but one managed to flee abroad and the other was a minor, leaving de la Barre as the main defendant. (Two more young men were arrested later as his accomplices, including, ironically, the son of a city magistrate who had been aggressively pursuing the investigation.)
No evidence ever linked de la Barre to the cross defacement. Even some of his other transgressions were in doubt; thus, several witnesses backed his claim that he had never bragged about disrespecting the religious procession but had simply responded to being chided for his lack of piety, offering the excuse of running late for a dinner. De la Barre's cousin the abbess, Anne-Marguerite Feydeau, pleaded on his behalf, claiming that he was a victim of malicious slanders, guilty at most of some youthful follies. Nonetheless, on February 28, 1766, a panel of three city magistrates found the chevalier guilty of "monstrous, execrable blasphemies against God, the Holy Eucharist, the Holy Virgin, religion and the commandments of God and the Church" and pronounced a sentence of shocking severity. After making public penance in front of Abbeville's main cathedral, de la Barre was to have his tongue cut out and then to be decapitated, with his body to be burned and his ashes to be scattered.
The case was appealed to the Parliament of Paris; the procurator general, de Fleury, recommended a commutation. But on June 4, the parliament voted 15-10 to uphold the sentence, apparently swayed by advocate general Denis-Louis Pasquier's diatribe against the menace of irreligion. According to a contemporary journalist, Pasquier explicitly targeted the Enlightenment philosophers—singling out Voltaire—and "presented the Abbeville profanations as a disastrous effect of the philosophical spirit which has been spreading through France." He also reportedly remarked that there was no point in trifling around with book-burning when the immolation of the authors would please God much more. Still, the Parliament contented itself with ordering that de la Barre's copy of The Philosophical Dictionary be thrown into the fire with his body.
The chevalier's supporters hoped for a royal pardon. But Louis XV demurred, apparently concerned that, after the spectacular execution of would-be regicide Robert Damiens nine years earlier, pardoning a blasphemer might be seen as implying that an offense to divine majesty was less grave than an offense to royal majesty. And so, on July 1, de la Barre went to his death.
It was a grand enough occasion that the high executioner of Paris, Henri Sanson, arrived in Abbeville with his eldest son and assistant (joining a crew of four local headsmen). On the morning of his final day, the chevalier was tortured on orders of the court—or, in the parlance of the era, subjected to "extraordinary questioning"—to make him confess to his offenses and betray his accomplices. In a speech over a hundred years later, Victor Hugo painted a grisly picture of de la Barre having his legs shattered by torture and his tongue ripped out with red-hot pincers. But this was a dramatic exaggeration; in fact, the chevalier mounted the steps of the scaffold with no difficulty, and the removal of his tongue was reduced to a symbolic cutting motion. Resigned to his fate, de la Barre had enough sangfroid to chat with the executioners and even quip about being "turned into a choir boy" when his hair was cut to expose his neck for the axe. It is unclear whether he ever made the court-ordered public penance.
The de la Barre affair grew into an international cause célèbre thanks partly to Voltaire. The aging philosopher, who had been living in the relative calm of his Ferney estate near Switzerland, was all the more horrified by the injustice and cruelty done to de la Barre because his own book was cited as proof of the young man's guilt. He championed the late chevalier's case in two pseudonymous pamphlets, "An Account of the Case of the Chevalier de la Barre" (1766) and "The Cry of Innocent Blood" (1775).
The dominant and enduring narrative, promoted by Voltaire and others, painted de la Barre as a freethinker victimized by religious obscurantism and priestly zealotry. A petition for his posthumous exoneration submitted from the Paris nobility in 1788, on the eve of the French Revolution, asserted that "a fanatical bishop"—i.e. the bishop of Amiens—"sent the unfortunate de la Barre to die on the scaffold for embracing this shining era of reason ahead of his time." More than a century later, when France under the Third Republic embarked on an aggressive campaign for the secularization of public life (laïcité), de la Barre—honored with a statue in Paris and dozens of streets named after him across the country—was elevated to martyrdom as a victim of the church.
The reality was more complicated. The Bishop of Amiens had actually added his own voice to the vain pleas for de la Barre's pardon. The chevalier's prosecution and execution was entirely the work of secular authorities; it was also highly atypical for its time. In her essay, Claverie notes that the number of executions for religious offenses in 18th-century Europe was "infinitesimal." The papal envoy to France at the time of the de la Barre affair, Pietro Colonna Pamphili, openly remarked that in Rome under the Inquisition such offenses would have been punished with no more than a year in jail.
Why, then, this cruel and unusual punishment? To some extent, poor de la Barre was the victim of local politics and perhaps social intrigue. (Rumors blamed a vendetta by a magistrate whose romantic overtures had been allegedly rebuffed by the Abbess Feydeau, or by another Abbeville politician whose plans to wed his son to a rich heiress may have been derailed by the young lady's attraction to de la Barre.) Yet it is also clear that the case was part of a political backlash against the rise of secularism, and of other liberal ideas seen as a threat to the established order. For all the vastly different histories of Christianity and Islam, this brings to mind the role of religious insecurity and fear of modernization in forming radical Islamism.
There are other surprising parallels. Modern-day leftists who have mixed feelings about France's cherished tradition of religious irreverence, at least as applied to Islam today, see this as an issue of the privileged mocking the beliefs of the marginalized and the powerless—France's Muslim immigrants. But earlier controversies about blasphemy, too, raised issues of class privilege. A 1920 book by historian Marc Chassaigne, The Case of the Chevalier de la Barre—brought out by a religious publishing house and written as a corrective to the secularist myth—paints de la Barre as an arrogant, thoughtless aristocrat who enjoyed mocking lower-class superstitions and flaunting his superiority over the little people by denigrating their faith. Voltaire's pamphlets in defense of the chevalier have an undercurrent of class prejudice, stressing the executed man's noble birth and taking swipes at one of the judges' lowly status as a former "pork merchant."
None of this, however, changes the appalling fact that de la Barre, like the Charlie Hebdo staffers two and a half centuries later, was murdered for the crime of irreverence—or that outrage at an offense against religion could incite large numbers of people to support such murder. The de la Barre case powerfully illustrates why modern French tradition cherishes the right to blasphemy as a hard-won freedom, and why it is right to do so.
And yet this story also has an odd little-known postscript which reminds us that religious faith is not the only belief system that breeds homicidal fanaticism. By the time de la Barre's conviction was reversed by France's National Convention in 1794, the "shining era of reason" had turned to terror driven by revolutionary zeal. Among its victims was Linguet, the lawyer who had tried to save de la Barre's life; he was sentenced to death for writing in overly flattering terms about the Austrian and English monarchs. He was executed by the same Sanson who, almost exactly twenty-eight years earlier, had beheaded his most famous client.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
culminated in the judicial murder of a young man named Fran?ois-Jean de la Barre, who became the last person executed for blasphemy in Europe.
I'm pretty sure the Nazis, among other governments since, killed people who expressed the "wrong" opinion about religion or the equivalent, state worship of the rulers.
For example, defending the religious rights of Jews got kind of dicey in Germany starting around 1932.
Dunno if it was explicitly called blasphemy.
And here we see the reason that Atheists, Communists, Socialists, Environmentalists, etc. so vigorously oppose being called the Religious Fanatics that they are. Identify them properly, and their pretensions of moral superiority vanish.
could you please explain how being an atheist makes one a "religious fanatic"? youre reasoning escapes me.
Jay, your demanding overreaction makes the man's point. Are you a zealous anti-deity atheist? Then again, aren't all atheists continually stomping their feet and holding their breath, insisting anyone in disagreement is a dimwitted believer in fairy tales? It seems people loudly declaring their unbelief do so with decidedly religious fervor.
Well said.
The "last execution" story is very dramatic and makes for great journalism, but less dramatic forms of historical censorship are in a sense even more dangerous because they are so easily passed over in silence. Take for example the anonymous Letters from Obscure Men (Litterae Obscurorum Virorum), banned by the Pope 500 years ago, which included texts in the "names" of various European academics and Church officials ? satirical impersonations that were so convincing that monks around Europe took them for actual writings by the purported authors. It's interesting that no one talks about the Letters and the history of their banning anymore, and that the recent criminalization of similar writings in New York has taken place without comment from Ms. Young or any other public intellectual. See the documentation of America's leading criminal satire case at:
http://raphaelgolbtrial.wordpress.com/
Also worthy of mention is the case of William Hone, who in 1817 was prosecuted for authoring "blasphemous and seditious pamphlets" that parodied a number of influential British politicians and "savagely attacked the government of the Prince Regent." I will say more about that in a separate post.
As promised: Hone, who had been reduced to indigence as a result of his incarceration pending trial, defended himself. His "erudition on the subject carried him through three trials by his proven plea of past usage." In spite of illness and exhaustion, Hone spoke on each of the three days for about seven hours, guiding the jury through famous examples of parody that he had gathered from many books. The prosecution "urged that to bring forward any previous parody was the same thing as if a person charged with obscenity should produce obscene volumes in his defense." Hone was acquitted on each count, and immense crowds inside and outside the court received the result enthusiastically. Soon afterwards, a public collection was made on his behalf.
The Hone case is one of the most famous in the annals of British law. No British citizen has ever again been prosecuted for the "crime" of seditious libel. Yet, in an America where an individual can be arrested in Peoria for "tweeting" in the name of the mayor, and where criminal libel has been resuscitated under peculiar legal pretexts in New York (see the above-linked documentation), not a single public commentator seems to recall that famous case to to deem it worthy of mention. So, yes, the "last execution" is important, but let's not forget other aspects of the tradition in which it took its place.
P.s. sorry for my typo: or to deem it...
Gawker discusses showing Muhammad on Wikipedia, refuses to show Muhammad themselves.
You didn't expect fuck-you courage from Gawker, did you? Because you'll be waiting a long time.
Nah, but I like kicking them whenever I can.
That, I completely understand.
Gawker is horrible.
"In the end, Emin ?amo was no match. Wikipedia, like another famously male-dominated and insular internet community, will always take the side of "free speech" when it's pitted against "sensitivity"?even when it's unclear that "free speech" and "sensitivity" are really what's at stake."
And what exactly, Gawker, does Wikipedia's 'male dominance' have to do with their position on the depictions of Muhammad?
Good for them. Thanks for convincing me that we need more male-dominated and insular internet communities, Gawker!
In other news, Lou Reed is dead, there was a State of the Union, and millennials like getting polled.
Lou Reed is dead
No shit! How did I miss that.
You were getting buried by the Cleveland Browns.
Yeah, gotta put that Charlie Hebdo thing in the context of European religious intolerance. Going back 250 years for an example is kind of a stretch, however. While we're at it, let's dig up the Edict of Fontainebleau.
Huguenots FTW.
Yeah, it's tough being a Puritan in France.
Thomas Aikenhead (c.?March 1676 ? 8 January 1697), last person to be executed for blasphemy in Britain:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aikenhead
Apparently his "friends" turned him in and the church rebuffed pleas for clemency..."urged "vigorous execution" to curb "the abounding of impiety and profanity in this land".
Fuck Lincoln....oops wrong thread.
You are either for body armor, or against body armor.
But if you wear body armor, how will you be able to eat your deep-dish pizza?
You must be kidding. This incident underscores rather the inherent autocracy of the French and their govt, now acting just like its Church. Hardly an object of admiration Voltaire was a typically "liberal" schnook who lived off the nobility, and wheeled and dealed in stocks while shedding his crocodile tears. His Machiavellism was the very embodiment of Mandeville's hypocritical clergy and rightly despised by Rousseau. And it seems plain to me that this magazine acts just like Charlie Hebdo's superannuated adolescents.