Daily Stormer
January 8, 2015
The upside of the Charlie Hebdo massacre – besides that it is going to finally kick off the race war from whence the fate of the Western world will be decided – is that everyone killed at the paper was a Marxist scumbag who pretty much deserved it. One of these persons was a disgusting Jew named Georges Wolinski.
Wolinski, 80, a Tunisia native who moved to France as a teenager, also was a cartoonist at the magazine and was known for his cynical and at times vulgar style. After entering journalism in the 1960s, he went on to work at leading French publications such as L’Humanite, Le Nouvel Observateur and Paris Match.
One of Wolinski’s cartoons, published in a 2002 compilation of his works, shows a Muslim girl walking with her mother down a war-ravaged street in the Middle East. The daughter asks what it means to be a free woman. The mother replies by presenting her daughter with a copy of a book titled “Hello Sadness.”
“It’s clear that this was a planned attack against Wolinski and the other cartoon artists,” said Richard Kenigsman, a well-known Jewish caricaturist and painter from Brussels. He cited an attack and multiple threats against Charlie Hebdo since 2006 for publishing caricatures deemed offensive to Islam.
Corinne Rey, a designer at the magazine, was forced under death threats to let two gunmen into the offices after she returned from bringing her daughter to kindergarten. The assailants made her punch in the security code and proceeded to shoot four caricaturists — Wolinski, Charbonnier, Jean Cabut and Bernard Verlhac — along with eight others in a gunfire spree that lasted five minutes.
His cartoons were mostly pornographic, a quick Google images search reveals.
Here’s an example:
By the way, how does a Tunisian Jew get a Polish Jew last name?
Oh, it’s because his dad was Polish!
Early life
Georges David Wolinski was born on June 28, 1934 in Tunis, French Tunisia. His parents, Lola Bembaron and Siegfried Wolinski, were Jewish. His father, who was from Poland, was murdered when Woliski was two years old. His mother was from Tunisia.[6][8] He moved to metropolitan France in 1945, shortly after World War II. He started studying architecture in Paris, but dropped out to take up cartooning.
Career
Wolinski began cartooning for Rustica in 1958.[5] Three years later, in 1961, he started contributing political and erotic cartoons and comic strips to the satirical monthly Hara-Kiri.
During the student revolts of May 1968, Wolinski co-founded the satirical magazine L’Enragé with Siné. He served as the editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo from 1961 to 1970. In the early 1970s, Wolinski collaborated with the comics artist Georges Pichard to create Paulette which appeared in Charlie Mensuel and provoked reactions in France during its publication. Wolinski’s work appeared in the daily newspaper Libération, the weekly Paris-Match, L’Écho des savanes and Charlie Hebdo.
In 2005, he was the recipient of the Grand Prix de la ville d’Angoulême at the Angoulême Festival.