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News Analysis: Frenchness: One size doesn't fit all
By John Vinocur International Herald Tribune
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2005
PARIS On one hand, there is French hubris, and its gratuitiously
insulting embrace of France's immigrants as partners in the country's
threadbare formulas of grandeur, equality and universality.
On the other, there is the eternal French dependency on the state, the
allegiance to the French model that has failed to provide the jobs,
education, housing, or respect adequate to integrate Arab and African
Muslims into a rich and resourceful country with real claims to special
grace.
These two elements run together, and it is at the point where they cross
that French reality has imploded: the intersection of the fakery producing a
one-size-fits-all Frenchness, and the ceaseless defense of a rigidly statist
social model refusing to reform the economy, open up the labor market, or
consider affirmative action.
This unique French context makes the nearly two weeks of rioting at the
edges of Paris and other big French cities, and now the declaration of a
national state of emergency and curfew, something less than an absolute
forewarning for the rest of Europe.
Thelocal context is the constant denigration by the political class of
everything that works elsewhere, especially if it is in the United States or
Britain. It is the general immodesty, engrained both left and right,
concerning a supposed French model for civilization for the world that
cannot find substantiation at home. And in the case of the current rioting,
it is the boomerang effect of a particular kind of French romanticism that,
over the years, legitimized intifadas, anti-globalist street fighters, and
fire-bomb tossing with the subtext, we're with you, brothers.
So the violence here arises not only from specially French circumstances
including massive housing projects in enclaves for the poor, and a dismal
colonial history in North and Black Africa. It also comes, pre-rationalized,
from the homegrown French who provided the conceits fashioning the
rationale, however jumbled, of the rioters.
An Arab kid in Clichy-sous-Bois may not articulate it, but what rage it must
create to hear he lives in the greatest, smartest, most fair country in the
world, revered as Islam's best-friend-in-the west from Algeria to Oman, and
then have to deal with a French reality of racist scorn and rejection.
Not to mention the French state which, clothed as the ideal republic, runs
the school, the bus, the Métro, owns the housing project, operates the job
center, and fails, in relation to immigrants, on all those levels.
In the country of the 35-hour week, where the state is hardly the symbol of
the work ethic, or civic sense in the land of the continuous public service
strike, administrative and school buildings have become the choice targets
of the rioters' Molotov cocktails. The republic's social welfare payments
are there, but accompanied by private sector job creation so enfeebled and
hiring discrimination so real that they turn any young person taking up the
state's offer to wield a broom or toilet brush into his neighborhood's
collaborateur.
Alain Touraine, the sociologist and perhaps the country's best known
academic, has pointed to the falseness and the lies in French society's
portrayal of itself for itself as the place where the most profound causes
of the violence and disintegration are found.
More self-defeating for France, the integration myth here, he said, was
stronger than in places like Germany and Italy.
In other countries in Europe, this kind of French-type self-aggrandizement
would be embarrassing or plain absurd. If places like the Netherlands or
Denmark can have problems in defining the Dutch or Danish ethos they want
their immigrants to comply with - although pressing foreigners to speak the
language and work instead of living from welfare - they spare them anything
as hollow as having to buy into a triumphant national myth.
A large majority of the French, those who still live well through the
system, in the meantime seem to have presumed their country was rich enough
to buy off, geographically isolate, and police the difficult immigrants.
Regardless of whether North Africans living in France jeered the
Marseillaise at international soccer matches in Paris, this arrangement
hardened into all the integration the country had to shell out for.
The fact was that France paid no attention to an average of 60 cars (the
figure is from the Interior Ministry) burned every night around the country
in the months leading up to the riots.
Or that in 2004, an internal security agency reported that there were 300
communities nationwide "in retreat," basically ones with a marked presence
of Islamic fundamentalism, hatred of France and the West, anti-Semitism, and
violence.
Touraine avoids any mention of these realities in his analysis, published
this week in Le Monde.
But he acknowledges that there will have to be some change in the notion of
a single, French identity, the French "me" he calls it, as the standard of
universal value here.
Change, more nuance, a more specifically diverse French model, or bluntly,
minority hiring quotas, preferential school admission, and school busing to
create palpable integration: These are not easy matters in a place where the
national myth of the republic and its incantation of perfect equality
provide a baseline of comfort and self-justification to politicians of all
parties.
Lionel Jospin, talking on the radio Wednesday morning, when asked about
affirmative action as a solution, just dismissed it out of hand. The former
Socialist prime minister, whose failure to provide the French a strong
enough notion of personal security led to his defeat in the first round of
the 2002 presidential elections, said this kind of affirmative step
"contradicts our republican tradition." If France is to go forward, he
insisted, "it's got to be within our model."
Indeed, a day or two before the riots began, Dominique de Villepin, the
prime minister, described affirmative action as "semantic debate" in a
country known by one and all to be committed to equal opportunity.
Now, Francois Bayrou, leader of the centrist group that with the
neo-Gaullists, makes up Jacques Chirac's presidential majority, describes
France as a "sick state, a state swollen into impotence" with "a democracy
that doesn't work well." This means, he said, that "reality never enters
political discussions."
But asked why the riots were happening here, since France's neighbors seemed
to be escaping its misery, Bayrou offered a general response that, like the
answers of the other politicians he condemned, hid from the specifics of
both responsibilities and solution:
"As long as French democracy doesn't change," Bayrou said, "these accidents
are going to continue." He left it there.
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