Call to bookstores for Boualem Sansal

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For Guerrick Fouchet, manager of the Gros Câlin bookstore in Paris, his colleagues organize too few events in support of the writer currently imprisoned by the Algerian regime. This encourages the far right to take over the cause.
This article is an op-ed, written by an author outside the newspaper and whose point of view does not reflect the editorial staff's views.
Dear colleagues, dear booksellers,
I met Boualem Sansal about ten years ago at the Book Fair. I wasn't yet a bookseller; I was part of the peaceful world of readers. And like everyone who'd ever met him, directly or indirectly, I had exactly the same feeling: Sansal is one of the kindest and most pleasant people I've ever met. Despite the requests, he seems to control the time, ignoring obligations by responding to everyone who wanted to speak to him. "Do you have a Breton first name? Oh, I love Brittany. Every time I'm there, I'm received like a king. You know, if I weren't Algerian, I'd apply for Breton nationality."
Today, a writer I admire is in prison. Boualem Sansal is forced into retirement behind bars, deprived of all freedom to move and create. He has become much more than a hero for our generation; he is a mirror that reflects the worst and most beautiful in us, and at the same time a compass that points us in the right direction. An old man has succeeded in shaking up a regime. In an age of spiritual and nutritional gurus venerated on the covers of the books we sell, a novelist awakens what is most sacred in Man: breathing.
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I write these words to my dear bookseller colleagues who seem very discreet on this subject. As Alexandre Jardin says: "I don't know Boualem Sansal, but I've read him, so I know him. When you read and love a writer, you don't forget him."
So why are there so few events in bookstores? It seems that the image, the fear of this image, takes precedence over action.
During a conference in favor of his release that I was leading at the town hall of the 8th arrondissement of Paris, someone in the room spoke to share an experience: "I went near the Parliament, to a demonstration in support of Sansal. And to my great surprise, I found only people from the far right. So I left." Not wanting to be associated with a militant and politicized fringe, this person gave up. But this reflects something worrying. Ideas are no longer defended, or can no longer be defended for what they are, but according to those by whom they are taken up. The observation is becoming alarming: either no one supports Sansal's cause anymore for fear of being labeled far right; or we are condemned, by defending the cause of a writer, to fall into the arms of a partisan fringe that puts itself on the front line.
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