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CHRONIC. Hassan Iquioussen embodies a fascinating paradox. That of an Islamist who sets fire to human rights, but can only live in the West.
by Kamel Daoud
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Ihere is something amusing, if not openly ironic, in the pugnacity of Moroccan imam Hassan Iquioussen in wanting to stay in France and avoid deportation to Morocco through a thousand contortions and recourses. Isn’t France a land of disbelief? Navel of secularism attacking God, according to the Islamists? Isn’t this land cursed for its freedoms, its cultures and its human rights, its skirts, its wines and its festivals? Why preach the loss of France and its Islamization by gender and texts to, in the end, cling to the torn flaps of the dress of the Republic? Why fight like a drowned man at the idea of being expelled from it to the land of Allah if this country is doing so badly, if it breaks the so-called law “of God” and embodies the devil…
Illustration: dusault for “Le Point”
The good life
How to learn (or relearn) to see life in pink? How to rediscover the pleasure of enjoying the moment? How not to forbid it? Often, we forbid ourselves to live today to better hope for a hypothetical tomorrow… Hence the interest of reading the authors presented in this special issue.
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