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Ali Akbar, who’s bought newspapers on the streets of Paris for 50 years, is now a knight
The Tycoon Herald > World > Ali Akbar, who’s bought newspapers on the streets of Paris for 50 years, is now a knight
World

Ali Akbar, who’s bought newspapers on the streets of Paris for 50 years, is now a knight

Tycoon Herald
By Tycoon Herald 8 Min Read Published February 20, 2026
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Ali Akbar, who’s bought newspapers on the streets of Paris for 50 years, is now a knight

Ali Akbar sells newspapers within the Latin Quarter in Paris in September 2025. The Pakistani-born 73-year-old is believed to be the final remaining newspaper vendor within the French capital, and was awarded a knighthood by France’s President Emmanuel Macron final month.

GUILLAUME BAPTISTE/AFP through Getty Photographs


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GUILLAUME BAPTISTE/AFP through Getty Photographs

PARIS — They name him the voice of Paris’ sixth arrondissement. Within the cafés of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Ali Akbar is a fixture — with a voice you possibly can’t miss. You often hear him earlier than you see him, shouting “Ça y est!” — his signature catchphrase, “That’s it!”

For greater than 50 years, the Pakistani-born newspaper hawker has made the identical day by day rounds on his secondhand bicycle, weaving between brasseries with contemporary stacks of papers like Le Monde and Libération. His clients have ranged from neighborhood regulars to Left Financial institution intellectuals just like the twentieth century thinker Jean-Paul Sartre and visiting presidents together with Invoice Clinton.

And final month, one other of his outdated clients — French President Emmanuel Macron — awarded him considered one of France’s highest honors, naming Akbar a knight within the Nationwide Order of Advantage.

“You are the accent of the 6th arrondissement,” Macron informed Akbar in a proper ceremony on the Élysée Palace in late January. “The voice of the French press on Sunday mornings — and every other day of the week.”

Macron went on to consult with Akbar as “probably the most French of the French — a Voltairean who arrived from Pakistan.”

Akbar’s medal comes with a quiet footnote: He’s believed to be the final newspaper hawker left in Paris. A job that when dotted avenue corners throughout town has virtually vanished, pushed out by the web and the collapse of print journalism gross sales. In a metropolis that now will get most of its headlines on telephones, Akbar nonetheless delivers them by hand.

French President Emmanuel Macron awards the Chevalier of the French Order of Merit to Ali Akbar at the Elysee Palace in Paris on Jan. 28, 2026. Akbar, an immigrant from Pakistan, has been selling newspapers around Saint-Germain-des-Pres in the French capital for 50 years.

French President Emmanuel Macron awards the Chevalier of the French Nationwide Order of Advantage to Ali Akbar on the Elysee Palace in Paris on Jan. 28, 2026. Akbar, an immigrant from Pakistan, has been promoting newspapers round Saint-Germain-des-Pres within the French capital for 50 years.

TOM NICHOLSON/POOL/AFP through Getty Photographs


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TOM NICHOLSON/POOL/AFP through Getty Photographs

One huge dream

At 73 years outdated, Akbar nonetheless works seven days per week, 10 hours a day — rain or shine.

Born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, the oldest of 10 youngsters, he says that rising up in poverty, he had one huge dream — to make sufficient cash to construct his mother a home. Simply earlier than his 18th birthday, he left house, decided to make a greater life overseas.

“I started to work hard,” he says.

For some time, he cleaned flooring on a ship in Greece, choosing up the Greek language. After that, he spent a while within the Netherlands and within the northern French metropolis of Rouen.

When he wound up in Paris in 1973, an Argentinian buddy prompt he begin promoting newspapers with him within the Latin Quarter. One of many first titles Akbar bought was a satirical weekly, which shocked him with its raunchy cartoons and irreverence towards French politicians.

“My first thought was: in my country, if you do that, they will kill you,” Akbar says.

He then added mainstream dailies, and grew to like the work of newspaper hawking, barely pondering twice about 18-hour days.

“Really, those days were paradise for me,” he says.

However that does not imply issues have been simple. There have been occasions when he was homeless, selecting to sleep on the streets to economize and ship it again to his household.

“I was always thinking of my mother and her children,” he says.

Ultimately he was in a position to fulfill his dream of constructing his mother her home. Within the years since, he has continued incomes a modest residing promoting papers. After an organized marriage again in Pakistan, Akbar and his spouse, Aziza, settled in a Paris suburb and raised 5 sons.

Akbar says he stays grateful to France for all the chance he has been given. However he’s not afraid to acknowledge the hardships he has confronted. The title of his 2005 memoir hints at what lies beneath the jubilant picture that is made him well-known: I Make the World Chortle, however the World Makes Me Cry.

Even so, Akbar — just like the Voltairean Macron described him as — chooses to deal with the constructive. “You can meet bad people everywhere, and there are also good people everywhere,” he says, when requested about his struggles.

Cheers and congratulations wherever he goes

As of late, Akbar can hardly go quite a lot of minutes and not using a stranger stopping him on the street to congratulate him on his latest honor.

For his household, his medal can be about therapeutic.

“It has put a bandage on old wounds,” says his son, Shamshad Akbar.

Akbar, who acquired his residency papers a long time in the past, says Macron has promised him French citizenship. The Élysee Palace would not remark when NPR requested about it.

Folks within the neighborhood say Akbar has given them one thing priceless — an opportunity for day by day human connection.

“He’s interested in you, and then you’re interested in him,” says longtime buyer Michel Mimran. “And this is very rare now in the big cities.”

As of late, Akbar says he is fortunate to make about 60 euros — about $70 — a day promoting papers.

And when sometime he lastly goes, the newspaper hawker commerce in Paris will go together with him.

However he has no intention of going anytime quickly. On a latest Sunday afternoon, Akbar pushed open the door of a packed brasserie on the Boulevard Saint-Germain. Heads turned. From the again of the room, a small crowd began chanting his identify. Then the remainder of the place joined in.

“Ali, Ali!” the room sang in unison.

Akbar smiled, lifted his fingers, holding papers, laughed — after which shouted in French and in English:

“Ça y est! I have realized my dream!”

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