A documentary on radical Islam has struck a nerve in France two-and-a-half months after a devastating terrorist attack in Paris and sparked a debate about freedom of expression.
The documentary “Salafists” opens on Wednesday in only five cinemas in France, and its portrayal of bloody images of terrorist propaganda has seen its directors accused of “flirting with advocating terrorism”.
Culture Minister Fleur Pellerin took the advice of the national commission to bar under-18s from seeing the film, a rare move for a documentary.
She said her decision was the result of the documentary makers “broadcasting scenes and talk of extreme violence without commentary”.
The run-up to the classification decision was accompanied by days of debate in France over the threat of the film being seen as condoning terrorism, or whether limiting audiences amounted to an attack on freedom of expression.
French director and writer Claude Lanzmann wrote on Le Monde’s website that the decision was “deaf, blind and stubborn” and amounted to “shameful censorship”. The controversy headlined the front page of the right-leaning Le Figaro newspaper which said the film was “violent and ambiguous and flirts with advocating terrorism”.
The documentary mostly focuses on extremism in the Sahel region of North Africa and was filmed in Mali, Tunisia, Mauritania and Algeria between 2012 and 2015.
It gives voice to leaders of al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and religious leaders belonging to the Salafist movement — fundamentalists who believe in the return to what are considered a purer form of Islam.
The film shows daily life under Sharia law (Islamic law) in the northern Mali cities of Gao and Timbuktu which fell under the control of terrorists in 2012, and is interspersed with images of Islamic State group propaganda and videos, some of which are extremely violent.
‘A genuine masterpiece’
The directors, Francois Margolin and Mauritanian journalist Lemine Ould Salem, have said they wanted to show the terrorists’ discourse in parallel with the reality of their acts.
“Our aim was to show the Salafists from the inside,” Margolin told AFP in December, saying the minority school of thought was increasingly influential and a gateway to becoming a terrorist.
However, an editorialist in Le Figaro said the film missed its mark “and ends up bringing together what it intends to fight — Salafist propaganda.”
The documentary also controversially included explicit footage of the murder of policeman Ahmed Merabet by the Kouachi brothers Said and Cherif as they fled from their attack on the offices of satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in January 2015.
The filmmakers removed the images of the terrorists shooting Merabet as he lay in the street, on his family’s request.
France has grappled with the issue of freedom of expression ever since the attack on Charlie Hebdo — long a target of terrorists for its depiction of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
The director Lanzmann, who made the 1985 Holocaust film Shoah, described “Salafists” as “a genuine masterpiece, illuminating daily life under Sharia law in a way that no book or ‘expert’ of Islam, ever has.”
Film critic Jean-Michel Frodon wrote on the French version of the Slate website that the film “gives a voice to the ‘enemy’. But giving him a voice is to know him better.”
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