Cartoonists fight back, drawing by drawing
Updated | By Bronwyn Hardick

Defiant, angry, poignant, irreverent and sobering, their drawings united cartoonists in grief, tried to make sense of the nonsensical, and sent a shared message: We must not, will not and should not be silenced. Some drawings touched such a nerve they made one want to both laugh and cry.
Atentado a Charlie Hebdo. http://t.co/TBlz9pBuI7 pic.twitter.com/3UrweOEYK0
— Bernardo Erlich (@berlich) January 7, 2015
“The world has become so serious that humor is a risky profession.”
"Can't sleep tonight, thoughts with my French cartooning colleagues, their families and loved ones," David Pope, cartoonist for The Canberra Times in Australia, wrote on his Twitter feed.
His drawing showed the lifeless body of a cartoonist and a hooded gunman holding a still-smoking rifle and saying: "He drew first."
Can't sleep tonight, thoughts with my French cartooning colleagues, their families and loved ones #CharlieHebdo pic.twitter.com/LqIMRCHPgK
— David Pope (@davpope) January 7, 2015
In India, cartoonist Manjul drew a plane exploding in a fireball into the Eiffel Tower, its pointy top redrawn as the nib of an ink pen.
One of the most powerful drawings had no drawing. Christian Adams' cartoon for The Daily Telegraph in London showed a completely blank space with the heading: "Extremist approved cartoon."
Another Telegraph cartoon showed one gunman saying to another: "Be careful, they might have pens."
The 12 people killed in the terrorist attack in Paris on Wednesday included some of France's leading cartoonists. Reveling in provocation and taking pride in their freedom to poke fun at anyone - be they popes, presidents, public figures or the Prophet Muhammad - they also faced frequent outrage and threats because of their work.
Here are some more powerful images delivered by cartoonists as a powerful visual response to the #CharlieHebdo massacre:
Washington Post cartoonist @AnnTelnaes on #CharlieHebdo. http://t.co/kwtvbInWJC pic.twitter.com/Ipk9Q6y0RA
— Anup Kaphle (@AnupKaphle) January 7, 2015
#CharlieHebdo pic.twitter.com/15O4YC2KWg
— Ruben L. Oppenheimer (@RLOppenheimer) January 7, 2015
#JeSuisCharlie Le coup de crayon hommage du dessinateur @ixene_dessin sur l'attaque de #CharlieHebdo. pic.twitter.com/kBma0FHtJi
— Le Figaro (@Le_Figaro) January 7, 2015
If you think violence can stop artistic expression and freedom of speech, you just got it all wrong #JeSuisCharlie pic.twitter.com/lYUthadfV2
— Karl Camilleri (@Makhami) January 7, 2015
#JeSuisCharlie pic.twitter.com/fhEC2EUMML
— Clara Andrés (@clara_andres) January 7, 2015
The world mourns the loss of French cartoonist Georges Wolinski; cartoonist Jean Cabut, aka Cabu; newspaper publisher Charb; cartoonist Tignous.
- AP
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