Funeral ceremonies have been held for seven of the people shot dead in last week's attacks in Paris, reports BBC News.
At a ceremony in central Paris, President François Hollande honoured the three police officers who died. Four men killed at a kosher supermarket have been buried in Jerusalem.
Last week's three days of terror began with an attack on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo on January 7th.
A total of 17 people were killed by Islamist gunmen.
This week's edition of Charlie Hebdo is to show a cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad - which is said to have prompted the attack by Islamist gunmen.
The cartoon shows the Prophet holding a "Je suis Charlie" sign and the words "All is forgiven".
It has been published widely in advance by French media. Outside France, The Washington Post, Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine, Corriere della Sera in Italy and the UK's Guardian are among publications to show the cartoon.
At the police headquarters in Paris, Mr Hollande posthumously bestowed France's top honour, the Légion d'Honneur, on the three officers - Franck Brinsolaro, Ahmed Merabet and Clarissa Jean-Philippe - their coffins draped in the French flag.
The officers "died so that we may live in freedom", he said at the ceremony broadcast on national TV.
"They died carrying out their duty with courage, bravery, dignity. They died as police officers."
French lawmakers - meeting for the first time since the events of last week - observed a minute's silence for the victims before singing the national anthem, the Marseillaise.
Speaking in the French National Assembly, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the gunmen had wanted to kill the "spirit of France", before adding: "But France is still standing - it is here - it is still present."
He said the huge unity demonstrations attended by millions on Sunday were a "magnificent response" to the violence, before adding: "We are at war against jihadism and terrorism... but France is not at war against Islam and Muslims."
In Jerusalem, the four Jewish victims of an attack on a kosher supermarket in Paris - Yoav Hattab, Philippe Braham, Yohan Cohen and Francois-Michel Saada - have been buried at the Har HaMenuhot cemetery.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, among the hundreds attending the Jerusalem funerals, told mourners the victims' lives had been "cut down by hatred".
The victims' relatives recited a traditional prayer and read eulogies.
Read more of this report from BBC News.
See also:
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Charlie Hebdo massacre: the dilemma for French Muslims
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The bitter background to the Charlie Hebdo massacre
'Not afraid': Parisians gather with a defiant message after Charlie Hebdo killings