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- <text id=91TT2025>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: France:Communism a la Francaise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- FRANCE
- Communism a la Francaise
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a town in the "Red Belt" of Paris, the party tends the grass
- roots and maintains its popular appeal
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Bobigny
- </p>
- <p> Enter town on Stalingrad Street. Take a whiff of the pink
- and red flowers planted around V.I. Lenin's bust. Among the
- high-rise concrete blocks of the Karl Marx Quarter, comrades are
- hawking the latest edition of the Communist Party newspaper.
- Plastered along Avenue Yury Gagarin, Nelson Mandela Street and
- Avenue Salvador Allende, posters sport a red hammer and sickle
- and a soft-sell slogan: A JOB, JUST TO SURVIVE.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to Bobigny, fiefdom of the French Communist Party
- and not about to apologize. Will they rebaptize the streets and
- dismantle the monument to Vladimir Ilyich? Mayor Georges Valbon
- grins broadly and shakes his head. "I was suckled on the milk of
- the October Revolution," he says. "Lenin was a symbol of hope
- for French workers and intellectuals." With his monogrammed
- shirts and rough-hewn charm, Valbon, 67, has ruled blue-collar
- Bobigny, a northeastern suburb of Paris, for two decades,
- winning by 66% in the past mayoral election. "Communism is still
- on the horizon," he contends. "We build it little by little,
- not by decree."
- </p>
- <p> The optimism is overblown. The cordon of communist-run
- industrial towns around Paris has frayed over the past decade
- as the country, ever more prosperous, moves rightward. In the
- 1988 presidential election, the Communist Party polled only
- 6.8%. Nonetheless, even as Soviet totalitarianism
- self-destructs, President Francois Mitterrand's minority
- Socialist government depends on 26 Communist deputies to pass
- its legislation. Unlike Communist parties in Italy and Spain,
- France's apparatus has no plans to change its name. Forty-six
- of France's 226 largest cities, including Bobigny, remain in
- Communist Party hands. And there, the mood is a mixture of
- nostalgic regret and last-ditch defiance.
- </p>
- <p> "Perhaps we should offer you a vodka," city councilor
- Raymond Chapin quips to a reporter. In the next breath he grows
- serious, recalling how, when he first joined the party two
- decades ago, it sent its members to visit the Soviet Union,
- "telling us it was a workers' paradise. Today," he acknowledges,
- "that would make people laugh." Outside city hall, activist
- Gerard Kourland is selling L'Humanite, the party organ, and
- patiently explaining the difference between the Russian and
- French parties: "We officially gave up on the dictatorship of
- the proletariat in 1976. And even before then, we had our
- doubts."
- </p>
- <p> In Bobigny self-interest has replaced ideology, and the
- Communists have built their political machine on a hair-trigger
- response to the grass roots. "They blanket the city," says
- opposition city councilor Jean-Luc Romero. "The moment anyone
- loses a job, a party worker stops by to offer help, part-time
- employment or a social subsidy." Among Bobigny's 44,000
- residents, the 2,700 Communist activists are organized into 70
- neighborhood and factory-based cells. If a family cannot pay the
- rent in its low-income housing project, the local cell leader
- will intervene with the authorities. If police show up to evict,
- cell members have been known to physically block the gendarmes.
- Naturally, beneficiaries are expected to respond at election
- time.
- </p>
- <p> The city sends hundreds of children to the country for
- summer vacations. It subsidizes three clinics for outpatient
- care. Municipal retirement homes shelter the elderly. Last week,
- street-corner notices invited students who cannot find places
- in universities to come to city hall for help. The largesse is
- financed by higher taxes on local business and subsidies from
- Socialist allies in state ministries.
- </p>
- <p> Communist goodwill extends even to religion. On a recent
- Sunday, fresh carnations adorned the statue of the Virgin Mary
- in what Bobigny residents call Karl Marx church, although the
- official name of the sanctuary on Karl Marx Avenue is St.
- Andre's. In his sermon before 150 faithful, Father Jean Dechet
- tactfully avoided the subject of communism's demise. "Christians
- and communists collaborate here," he said after the service.
- "The communists are attentive to people's needs.'' Ten years
- ago, Valbon's government paid $500,000 to build a new church.
- </p>
- <p> In Bobigny's mall, where the wine and cheese shop faces
- the Belgian chocolate shop, where McDonald's shovels out Big
- Macs and the video-store window displays the Gummi Bears,
- distinctions between communists and capitalists blur. Outside,
- three dozen streets are named for French communists, pacifists
- and revolutionaries. Politically correct artists are
- commemorated: the Pablo Picasso Metro station, the Charlie
- Chaplin Cultural Center and, most recently, a street named for
- detective-story writer Dashiell Hammett, once blacklisted as a
- communist. What does the future hold? A symbolic test looms, in
- the form of a new sports center. The city council's right-wing
- minority has proposed naming it the Andrei Sakharov Swimming
- Pool. The communists are squirming. Says Romero: "That really
- stumped them."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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