Despite the frigid cold, over 200 people gathered in Manhattan’s Union Square Wednesday evening in solidarity with the victims of a terror attack that took place earlier in the day, leaving 12 dead at the Paris offices of French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.
An estimated 200-400 people stood together in near silence at first, braving temperatures that dipped into the teens, holding signs that read “Je suis Charlie” — a phrase that translates to “I am Charlie” and has become the rallying cry of those showing support for the attack’s victims. Eventually, the crowd erupted in song, including the French national anthem.
Attendees included French nationals, Americans and citizens of other countries who repeatedly chanted “We are Charlie! Nous sommes Charlie!,” “We are not afraid!,” and “We are free and proud of it!” Police presence was minimal.
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Eilham Zrida, a New Yorker of French and Moroccan descent who was raised Muslim, said “I could not be more upset and saddened by the events today. They have touched the core, the heart of the French Republic. Today I am a human, I am French, I am Muslim … but I am disgusted. Today should not have happened. But hopefully it will allow for a … national and international discussion.”
Signs at #JeSuisCharlie rally in NYC pic.twitter.com/xCTusbb21h
— Nisha Chittal (@NishaChittal) January 7, 2015
Another attendee, Mok Auger, told msnbc he was worried because his cousin was in Paris, just a hundred yards away from the crime scene, and was told by police to remain on lockdown for almost six hours. “We are all here today to support friends and support journalism, freedom of speech, and freedom of expression,” Auger said.
Jenny Rostami, an American, attended the rally with her fiance Victor Desseaux, who is French. Rostami told msnbc she attended the rally in Union Square because as an American, any attack on free speech matters to her. Desseaux said that his family back home in France was still stunned.
Earlier Wednesday, as night fell on Paris, marchers flooded the French capital city’s streets, many carrying pens as a sign of unity with the journalists whose murder is widely considered an affront to a core democratic value: freedom of the press.
Two masked gunmen armed with Kalashnikov assault weapons stormed the offices of Charlie Hebdo Wednesday morning, killing a dozen people. They yelled “Allahu Akbar” — or “God is great” —before fleeing to a black Citroen parked outside, according to Paris prosecutor Francois Molins.








