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- <text id=89TT1137>
- <title>
- May 01, 1989: France:Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 01, 1989 Abortion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 48
- FRANCE
- Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>200 years later, the French are still quarreling about the
- revolution
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Paris
- </p>
- <p> The revolution is a complex whole, like life itself, with
- the inspiring and the unacceptable, with hope and fear, violence
- and fraternity."
- </p>
- <p> Francois Mitterrand A big azure-and-gilt hot-air balloon,
- a reproduction of an 18th century model, wafted skyward in a
- "salute to liberty'' as thousands of spectators gathered in the
- Tuileries Gardens last January for the official launch of the
- bicentennial of the French Revolution. The Republican Guard
- played a fanfare. An actor solemnly read the 1789 Declaration
- of the Rights of Man and Citizen.
- </p>
- <p> Five days later, in a theater across town, a dozen masked
- youths with shaved heads invaded a concert of revolution-era
- songs. Crying "Long live the King!" the royalist punks tossed
- tear-gas canisters and knocked mezzo-soprano Helene Delavault
- to the floor. "At first we thought it was part of the
- spectacle," said Jean-Noel Jeanneney, president of the
- government's Bicentennial Mission. It wasn't. The singer was
- hospitalized, and President Mitterrand led the list of notables
- expressing outrage.
- </p>
- <p> It was an appropriate start -- first uplift, then excess.
- Just like the original revolution. Reconciliation is the
- official theme of the 200th anniversary of modern France's
- cataclysmic birth, but nearly four months into the celebration
- the French seem as much cleaved as healed by the occasion. For
- if the revolution sprang from the idealism of the Enlightenment,
- promising liberty and equality, it soon deteriorated into a
- bloodbath that led to a dictatorship. Ever since, lurching
- wildly through two empires, two royal restorations and five
- republics, democratic France has tried to bridge the
- contradictions posed by its brutal beginning. Even today, when
- the left-right dialectic of French politics has softened under
- a socialist government leaning toward the center, the
- bicentennial has abraded old sores.
- </p>
- <p> The revolution is fixed in the collective psyche of the
- nation. Ask any Frenchman to free-associate: he automatically
- recites, "Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite." Then comes a torrent
- of violent images. Heads on pikes. Hungry mobs storming
- Versailles. Women knitting and jeering in front of the scaffold.
- Marat murdered in his bath. The zealous Saint-Just railing,
- "There is no liberty for the enemies of liberty!" And the
- battalions of Marseilles singing the nation's new anthem: "May
- the blood of the impure soak our fields."
- </p>
- <p> For the Mitterrand government, the bicentennial is a
- political opportunity and a ticklish responsibility. On July 14,
- the anniversary of the fall of the Bastille, the leaders of the
- seven industrialized nations -- France, the U.S., Canada, Japan,
- Britain, West Germany and Italy -- will assemble in Paris for
- a summit. What kind of image will France present? On the
- surface, at least, that of a united nation celebrating its
- glorious past with the hoopla of a spectacular Bastille Night
- parade and sound-and-light show down the Champs Elysees.
- Already, merchants are hawking underwear decorated with little
- guillotines. French television is reveling in soap-opera love
- affairs between 18th century aristocrats and commoners. Villages
- across France are dressing up their summer festivals in blue,
- white and red.
- </p>
- <p> But even two centuries later, not all of France cherishes
- the spirit of 1789. Counterrevolutionary commemorations are
- proliferating. Right-wing Catholics are organizing a huge "Mass
- for the Martyrs" of the revolution on Aug. 15 in the Place de
- la Concorde. Local governments in western France helped raise
- funds for a $7 million movie called Vent de Galerne, which
- opened last month, about the republican army's savage repression
- of peasant rebels in the Vendee. In Lyons a historical society
- is tracing the descendants of 3,000 executed in anti-Jacobin
- uprisings. "The bicentennial is more an occasion for mourning
- than for celebration," says philosopher Jean-Marie Benoist, a
- former adviser to Paris Mayor Jacques Chirac. Asks Sorbonne
- historian Pierre Chaunu: "Why should we celebrate a failure?"
- </p>
- <p> The official strategy for evading an answer is to focus
- resolutely on the high-minded events of 1789, like the
- Declaration of Rights, with its ideals of liberty, equality, and
- the sovereignty of the people. As for the blood that flowed
- thereafter -- the September Massacres of 1792, the Terror of
- 1793, and the 1793-94 uprising of the Vendee in which 400,000
- died -- the less said the better. The play-it-safe politics of
- the commemoration is aimed at creating at least the illusion of
- ideological harmony, the same strategy that has sparked
- Mitterrand's recent political success. "We're not going to
- celebrate the guillotine," says Jeanneney. "Our mission is to
- emphasize the positive."
- </p>
- <p> The trouble with this homogenized version of history is
- that the battles fought during the revolution still resist
- accommodation 200 years later. Twentieth century French
- historiography has been dominated by a Marxist school that
- celebrated the French Revolution and its class struggles as the
- mother of the Bolshevik Revolution. Regicide was the only way
- to crush the power of the privileged, and the Terror, like
- Stalin's purges, was a necessary transition to an eventual
- dictatorship of the proletariat. Many French have thought of
- themselves as different from other Europeans because they broke
- so violently with their past and started fresh.
- </p>
- <p> The unreconstructed left wants an unapologetic bicentennial
- honoring the nation's radical roots. "France is still a country
- of class struggle," wrote historian Claude Mazauric in the
- Communist Party newspaper L'Humanite. "The message of 1789 . .
- . is to build a society unconstrained by multinational
- capitalism." SOS-Racisme, a civil rights group, for example,
- will celebrate with a rally for Toussaint L'Ouverture, a former
- slave who led an 18th century Haitian rebellion against French
- colonialism. A group of prominent Parisian socialists is
- agitating to rename part of the Rue St.-Honore after
- Robespierre. "All revolutions have excesses," explains former
- Health Minister Leon Schwarzenberg, "and any revolution without
- them must be considered suspect." But so far Robespierre's
- defenders have had no luck, and even moderates are concerned
- that the government has gone too far in snubbing controversial
- revolutionary leaders. "They are going to present people with
- a pasteurized, dissected, plastic-wrapped revolution," complains
- philosopher and leftist philosopher Andre Glucksmann.
- </p>
- <p> In the past decade Marxist history has lost its sway as
- many French intellectuals grew disillusioned with East bloc
- totalitarianism. A revisionist school, influenced by
- nonpartisan British and American scholars, presents a more
- complex picture of the revolution: nobles seeking to weaken
- royal power played a driving role in the rebellion, for example;
- few peasants suffered under a feudal yoke. In the U.S. a much
- heralded new work by Harvard University's Simon Schama, called
- Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution, depicts the
- ancien regime in a positive light -- not too differently from
- France's current best seller La Revolution, by historian
- Francois Furet. "The French have come to realize that the
- revolution was a magnificent event that turned out badly," says
- Furet, a professor at Paris' Ecole des Hautes Etudes and the
- University of Chicago.
- </p>
- <p> Furet views contemporary France as a "republic of the
- center" in which a consensus has emerged in favor of market
- economics combined with broad social services. "Left-right
- rhetoric today does not correspond to reality," he says. "France
- has buried its civil war." Three key changes explain why: the
- Fifth Republic finally established a strong, stabilizing
- presidency; the appeal of the Communist Party has withered; and
- the old antagonism between the Roman Catholic church and state
- has eased. "The left is in power precisely because it renounced
- its revolutionary culture," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Frenchmen appear ambivalent about their revolutionary
- forebears. Polls show that the most revered figure of the era
- is now the Marquis de Lafayette, who ultimately broke with the
- Jacobins and fled the country. After a televised re-enactment
- of Louis XVI's trial, only 27% of French viewers favored
- beheading the hapless King. One French poll even found that 17%
- of the country wants the return of the monarchy. Seeking new
- heroes, Mitterrand said last week that he will place in the
- Pantheon, France's national mausoleum, the remains of the
- Marquis de Condorcet, an influential leader of the National
- Assembly who called for universal public education, and of the
- Abbe Gregoire, a revolutionary priest who advocated civil rights
- for Protestants and Jews.
- </p>
- <p> But the church is still not entirely reconciled. Many
- Catholics consider Gregoire a turncoat priest for swearing
- allegiance to the revolutionary state, which repudiated the
- power of the Pope. Last June, Jean-Marie Cardinal Lustiger, head
- of the French church, officially endorsed a campaign to sanctify
- 181 priests and three bishops who were murdered by a Paris mob
- in the Carmes prison in 1792. "France is like a family that has
- had an internal dispute," Lustiger said. "If we don't talk about
- the bad things that happened, we won't have a real
- reconciliation." Right-wing Catholics will converge on Paris for
- an August anti-bicentennial rally. Says Francois Triomphe,
- founder of Anti-89, an umbrella for several dozen groups
- protesting the government's celebrations: "We seek reparations
- for the evils done to the church."
- </p>
- <p> In western France, where counterrevolutionary rebellions in
- the Vendee, Brittany and Normandy were brutally put down,
- antipathy toward the revolution is widespread. Historian Chaunu
- calls the retribution "genocide." In 1793 General Francois
- Westermann had reported proudly to his government, "I have
- trampled the children under my horses' hooves. I have massacred
- the women so they will give birth to no more rebels." The new
- movie about the Vendee uprising, Vent de Galerne, has
- understandably garnered intense local support and money. Says
- Jean-Michel Mousset, a trucking-company owner from Ste.-Florence
- who put up $5,000: "In 1793 liberty, equality and fraternity was
- on our side, not on the side of the republicans."
- </p>
- <p> The dissenting voices on both the right and the left have
- had little effect on the majority of 1789 commemorations.
- Celebrations large and small, local and national, will attract
- record numbers of tourists to France. If these do not mark a
- true festival of reconciliation, the French can still take pride
- in the passion they have for their history. In Lyons, Jacques
- Tournier, the descendant of a water carrier who was guillotined
- in 1793, recalls that his grandmother refused to walk past the
- place in the market where the execution machine stood. "Now I
- too avoid that spot out of respect for my ancestors," Tournier
- says. Jacques Delmas, a lawyer from Reims, has fonder feelings
- for the revolution. "One of my ancestors stormed the Bastille,"
- he says, "and I feel both thrilled and proud to be French
- whenever I walk past the place where it once stood."
- </p>
- <p> However it is celebrated, France's birthday party promises
- to be anything but boring. The main business of such a
- celebration is, after all, a kind of national introspection.
- More than a century ago, historian Alexis de Tocqueville, the
- first cool head to examine the various sides of the revolution,
- wrote, "Happy are those who can tie together in their thoughts
- the past, the present and the future. No Frenchman of our time
- has had this happiness." In this bicentennial year, the task
- seems daunting as ever. But the stimulation of ideas and the
- resulting reflection make the jubilee remembrance well worth all
- the fuss.
- </p>
- <p> MISCONCEPTIONS
- </p>
- <p> MYTH -- The storming of the Bastille freed hundreds.
- </p>
- <p> FACT -- The fortress held only seven prisoners.
- </p>
- <p> MYTH -- Death by guillotine was quick and painless.
- </p>
- <p> FACT -- Execution often took several chops.
- </p>
- <p> MYTH -- Most guillotine victims were aristocrats.
- </p>
- <p> FACT -- Only 10% of those beheaded were nobles.
- </p>
- <p> MYTH -- The guillotine was the main form of execution.
- </p>
- <p> FACT -- Most of the 400,000 put to death during the
- revolution were shot, burned or drowned.
- </p>
- <p> MYTH -- When the poor rioted over the price of bread, Marie
- Antoinette cried, "Let them eat cake!"
- </p>
- <p> FACT -- Attributed to an unnamed "princess," the remark
- appears in Rousseau's Confessions at least two years
- before Marie Antoinette arrived in France in 1770.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-