Untitled Document
Saturday night was the 10th day of the spreading youth riots that have much
of France in flames -- and it was the worst night ever since the first riot
erupted in a suburban Paris ghetto of low-income housing, with 1295 vehicles
-- from private cars to public buses -- burned last night, a huge jump from
the 897 set afire the previous evening. And, for the first time, the violence
born in the suburban ghettos last night invaded the center of Paris -- some
40 vehicles were set alight in Le Marais (the pricey home to the most famous
gay ghetto in Paris, around the Place de la Republique nearby, and in the bourgeois
17th arrondissement, only a stone's throw from the dilapidated ghetto of the
Goutte d'Or in the 18th arrondissement. (Upper left, a fireman tries
to extinguish a burning car in the surban ghetto of Les Mureaux northwest of
Paris, yesterday.)
 |
As someone who lived in France for nearly a decade, and who has visited those
suburban ghettos, where the violence started, on reporting trips any number
of times, I have not been surprised by this tsunami of inchoate youth rebellion
that is engulfing France. It is the result of thirty years of government neglect:
of the failure of the French political classes -- of both right and left --
to make any serious effort to integrate its Muslim and black populations into
the larger French economy and culture; and of the deep-seated, searing, soul-destroying
racism that the unemployed and profoundly alienated young of the ghettos face
every day of their lives, both from the police, and when trying to find a job
or decent housing. (Above right, two buses burned by the rioters).
To understand the origins of this profound crisis for France, it is important
to step back and remember that the ghettos where festering resentment has now
burst into flames were created as a matter of industrial policy by the French
state.
 |
If France's population of immigrant origin -- mostly Arab, some black -- is
today quite large (more than 10% of the total population), it is because there
was a government and industrial policy during the post-World War II boom years
of reconstruction and economic expansion which the French call "les trentes
glorieuses" -- the 30 glorious years -- to recruit from France's foreign
colonies laborers and factory and menial workers for jobs which there were no
Frenchmen to fill. These immigrant workers were desperately needed to allow
the French economy to expand due to the shortage of male manpower caused by
two World Wars, which killed many Frenchmen, and slashed the native French birth-rates
too. Moreover, these immigrant workers were considered passive and unlikely
to strike (unlike the highly political French working class and its Communist-led
unions.) This government-and-industry-sponsored influx of Arab workers (many
of whom saved up to bring their families to France from North Africa) was reinforced
following Algerian independence by the Harkis. (Above left, Arab workers
at a French Renault factory.)
 |
The Harkis ( whose story is movingly told by Dalila Kerchouche in her Destins
de Harkis, at right) were the native Algerians who fought
for and worked with France during the post-war anti-colonial struggles for independence
--and who for their trouble were horribly treated by France. Some 100,000 Harkis
were killed by the Algerian FLN (National Liberation Front) after the French
shamelessly abandoned them to a lethal fate when the French occupying army evacuated
itself and the French colonists from Algeria. (Above Left, a Harki with
his throat slit by the FLN.) Moreover, those Harki families who were
saved, often at the initiative of individual military commanders who refused
to obey orders not to evacuate them, once in France were parked in unspeakable,
filthy, crowded concentration camps for many long years and never benefited
from any government aide--a nice reward for their sacrifices for France, of
which they were, after all, legally citizens. Their ghettoized children and
grandchildren, naturally, harbor certain resentments.
 |
France's other immigrant workers were warehoused in huge, high-rise low-income
housing ghettos -- known as "cités" (Americans would say "the
projects") -- specially built for them, and deliberately placed out of sight
in the suburbs around most of France's major urban agglomerations, so that their
darker-skinned inhabitants wouldn't pollute the center cities of Paris, Lyon,
Toulouse, Lille, Nice and the others of white France's urban centers today encircled
by flames. Often there was only just enough public transport provided to take
these uneducated working class Arabs and blacks directly to their jobs in the
burgeoning factories of the "peripherique" -- the suburban peripheries
that encircled Paris and its smaller sisters -- but little or none linking the
ghettos to the urban centers.
 |
Now 30, 40, and 50 years old, these high-rise human warehouses in the isolated
suburbs are today run-down, dilapidated, sinister places, with broken elevators
that remain unrepaired, heating systems left dysfunctional in winter, dirt and
dog-shit in the hallways, broken windows, and few commercial amenities -- shopping
for basic necessities is often quite limited and difficult, while entertainment
and recreational facilities for youth are truncated and totally inadequate when
they're not non-existent, Both apartments and schools are over-crowded (birth
control is a cultural taboo in the Muslim culture the immigrants brought with
them and transmitted to their children, and even for their male grandchildren
of today --who've adopted hip-hop culture and created their own French-language
rap music of extraordinary vitality (which often embodies stinging social and
political content) -- condoms are a no-no because of Arab machismo, contributing
to rising AIDS rates in the ghettos. (Above left, ghetto housing in
Aulny sous Bois, where the riots started.)
 |
The first week in December will mark the 22nd anniversary of the Marche des
Beurs (Beur means Arab in French slang). I was present to see the cortege of
100,000 arrive in Paris -- it was the Franco-Arab equivalent of Dr. Martin Luther
King's 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Justice The Marche des Beurs was
organized from Lyon's horrific, enormous suburban high-rise ghetto, Les Minguettes
(right), with the help of a charismatic left-wing French Catholic
worker-priest, Father Christian Delorme, and its central theme was the demand
to be recognized as French "comme les autres" --- like everyone else....a
demand, in sum, for complete integration.
But for the mass of Franco-Arabs, little has changed since 1983 -- and the integrationist
movement of "jeunes beurs" created around that march petered out in
frustration and despair. In recent years, its place has been taken by Islamist
fundamentalists operating through local mosques -- the mediatic symbol of this
retreat into a separatist, communitarian-religious politics is the slick demagogue
Tariq Ramadan (left), a philosophy professor who uses one cosmetically
democratic discourse when he's speaking on French TV, and a fiery, hard-line fundamentalist
discourse in the Arab-language cassettes of his speeches that sell like hotcakes
to Franco-Arab ghetto youth. (Ramadan's double language has been meticulously
documented by the Arab-speaking journalist Caroline Fourest in her book published
last fall by Editions Grasset, "Frere
Tariq: discourse, methode et strategie de Tariq Ramadan," extracts from
which have been published
in the weekly l'Express. ) But the current rebellion has little to do with
Islamic fundamentalism.
In 1990, Francois Mitterrand (right) -- the Socialist President
then -- described what life was like for jobless ghetto youths warehoused in
the overcrowded "cités":
"What hope does a young person have who's been born in a quartier
without a soul, who lives in an unspeakably ugly high-rise, surrounded by more
ugliness, imprisoned by gray walls in a gray wasteland and condemned to a gray
life, with all around a society that prefers to look away until it's time to
get mad, time to FORBID."
Well, Mitterrand's perceptive and moving words remained just that -- words
-- for his urban policy was an underfunded, unfocussed failure that only put
a few band-aids on a metastasizing cancer -- and 15 years after Mitterrand's
diagnosis, the hopelessness and alienation of these ghetto youths and their
"gray lives" has only become deeper and more rancid still.
 |
The response to the last ten days of violent youth rebellion by the conservative
government has been inept and tone-deaf. For the first four days of the rebellion,
Chirac (left) and his Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin
(right) decided to let the hyper-ambitious, megalomaniacal
Interior Minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, lead the government's response to the youth's
violence and arson. Chirac and Villepin detest Sarkozy, who has been openly
campaigning to replace Chirac as president in 2007 (Villepin was made P.M. in
the hopes that he could block Sarkozy for the right's presidential nomination),
The President and his P.M. thought that "Sarko," as he's commonly
referred to in France -- who won his widespread popularity as a hardline, law-and-order
demagogue on the issue of domestic insecurity -- would be unable to stop the
violence, and thus damage his presidential campaign.
 |
But Sarkozy (left) only poured verbal kerosene on the flames,
dismissing the ghetto youth in the most insulting and racist terms and calling
for a policy of repression. "Sarko" made headlines with his declarations
that he would "karcherise" the ghettos of "la racaille"--
words the U.S. press has utterly inadequately translated to mean "clean"
the ghettos of "scum." But these two words have an infinitely harsher
and insulting flavor in French. "Karcher" is the well-known brand
name of a system of cleaning surfaces by super-high-pressure sand-blasting or
water-blasting that very violently peals away the outer skin of encrusted dirt
-- like pigeon-shit -- even at the risk of damaging what's underneath. To apply
this term to young human beings and proffer it as a strategy is a verbally fascist
insult and, as a policy proposed by an Interior Minister, is about as close
as one can get to hollering "ethnic cleansing" without actually saying
so. It implies raw police power and force used very aggressively, with little
regard for human rights. I wonder how many Anglo-American correspondents get
the inflammatory, terribly vicious flavor of the word in French? The translation
of "karcherise" by "clean" just misses completely the inflammatory
violence of what Sarko was really saying. And "racaille" is infinitely
more pejorative than "scum" to French-speakers -- it has the flavor
of characterizing an entire group of people as subhuman, inherently evil and
criminal, worthless, and is, in other words, one of the most serious insults
one could launch at the rebellious ghetto youth.
 |
As the rebellion has spread beyond the Paris suburbs as far south as Marseilles
and Nice and as far north as Lille, Sarkozy has been thundering that the spreading
violence is centrally "organized." But on the telephone this morning
from Paris, the dean of French investigative reporters -- Claude Angeli, editor
of Le Canard Enchaine (at right with his wife, author Stephanie Mesnier)
-- told me, "That's not true -- this isn't being organized by the Islamist
fundamentalists, as Sarkozy is implying to scare people. Sure, kids in neighborhoods
are using their cellphones and text messages to warn each other where the cops
are coming so they can move and pick other targets for their arson. But the
rebellion is spreading because the youth have a sense of solidarity that comes
from watching television -- they imitate what they're seeing, and they sense
themselves targeted by Sarkozy's inflammatory rhetoric. The rebellion is spreading
spontaneously -- driven especially by racist police conduct that is the daily
lot of these youths. It's incredible the level of police racism -- they're arrested
or controlled and have their papers checked because they have dark sins, and
the police are verbally brutal, calling them 'bougnoules' [a racist insult,
something like the American "towel-heads", only worse] and telling
them, 'Lower your eyes! Lower your eyes!' as if they had no right to look a
policeman in the face. It's utterly dehumanizing. No wonder these kids feel
so divorced from authority."
 |
A team report in
today's French daily, Liberation (where I was once a columnist), interviews
ghetto youths, and asks them to explain the reasons for their anger.And, the
paper reports, "All, or almost all, cite 'Sarko'....a 22-year old student
says, 'Sarkozy owes us his excuses for what he said. When I see what's happened,
I come back to the same image: Sarkozy when he went to Argenteuil, raising his
head and thundering, Madame, we're going to clean all that up. Result? Sarko
sent every body over the top, he should a total disrespect toward everybody"
in the ghetto." A 13-year-old tells the Liberation reporters: "'It's
us who are going to put Sarkozy through the Karcher...Will I be out making trouble
tonight?' He smiles and says, 'that's classified information.' "Another
28-year-old youth: "Who's setting the fires? They're kids between 14 and
22, we don't really know who they are because they put on masks, don't talk,
and and don't brag about it the next day...but instead of fucking everything
up where they live, it would be better if they held a demo, or went and fucked
up the people and the stores in Paris. We've got minister , Sarko, who says
'You're all the same.' Me, I say non, we all say non -- but in reply we still
get, 'You're all the same.' That response from the government creates something
in common between all of us, a kind of solidarity. These kids want to get attention,
to let people know they exist. So, they same to themselves, 'If we get nasty
and create panic, they won't forget us, they'll know we're in a neighborhood
where we need help." (Above right, arson in the Paris suburb of
Aubervilliers)
 |
Yesterday, when Sarkozy (left) -- who is Minister of Religion
as well as Interior Minister -- wanted to make an appearance at the Catholic
Bishops' conference in Paris, they refused to let him speak -- and instead,
the Bishops issued a ringing statement denouncing "those who would call
for repression and instill fear" instead of responding to the economic,
social, and racial causes of the riots. This was an unusually sharp rebuke directed
squarely at Sarkozy.
 |
Under the headline "Budget Cuts Exasperate Suburban Mayors," Le Monde
reports today on how Chirac and his conservatives have compounded 30 years of
neglect of the ghettos by slashing even deeper into social programs: 20% annual
cuts in subsidies for neighborhood groups that work with youths since 2003,
cuts in youth job-training programs and tax credits for hiring ghetto youth,
cuts in education and programs to teach kids how to read and write, cuts in
neighborhood police who get to know ghetto kids and work with them (when Sarkozy
(right) went to Toulouse, he told the neighborhood police:
"You're job is not to be playing soccer with these kids, your job is to
arrest them!" With fewer and fewer neighborhood cops to do preventive work
that defuses youth alienation and violence, the alternative is to wait for more
explosions and then send in the CRS (Compagnies Republicaines de Securite, hard-line
paramilitary SWAT teams). Budget cuts for social programs plus more repression,
is a prescription for more violence.
That's why Le
Monde's editorial today warned that a continuation of this blind policy
creates a big risk of provoking a repeat of 2002, when the neo-fascist Jean-Marie
Le Pen made it into the runoff.
And a majority of the country, empoisoned even more by racism after the violence
of the last ten days, seems willing to accept more and more repression: a poll
released last night on France 2 public TV shows that 57% of the French support
Nicolas Sarkozy's hard-line approach to the ghetto youths' rebellion, now spreading
right across France. Sarko's demagogy seems to be working -- at least with the
electorate -- but it won't stop the violence, it will only increase it.
Go to Original Article >>>
The views expressed herein are the writers' own and do not necessarily reflect those of Looking Glass News. Click the disclaimer link below for more information.
Email: editor@lookingglassnews.org.
|