November 14, 2005 17:11 |
by Matt Reichel
The mainstream press has been telling Europeans that "riots"
have broken out in the Parisian Suburbs (Banlieues) this week. In
calling them "riots", the popular imagination likens them
to fires and other sorts of largely uncontrollable disasters. It's
as if the French are merely being faced with an outbreak of civil
unrest, and that someone from the ranks of the government will most
assuredly figure out how to weather the storm within the coming days.
These aren't "riots". This is social rebellion, directed
at decades of French imperial rule, and ultra-capitalist and racist
policymaking at home. After the "decolonization" process
finished in Africa (oddly leaving the former colonies entirely dependent
on the Banque de France for their monetary policymaking and at the
whim of French military decision-making), the colonized were supposed
to be offered life in France as a sort of reparation for the destruction
that went along with the imperial era. This, predictably, has turned
out to be nothing more than a bone that the French have thrown at
their dependants to try to keep them quiet. The idea is this: give
them cheap, shitty housing away from the beautiful Metropole of
Paris, give them minimum wage paying work, and hope that they shut
up.
Obviously, "they" haven't shut up. The largely immigrant
population of the northern Banlieue has grown tired of being shut
out. What's more, this is nothing new. Over the last decade or so,
urban revolt has been a regular, if not common occurrence. Fires,
car bombings, random acts of violence, and vandalism are all part
of life in Paris' most neglected district.
Referred to as the "93 (neuf-trois)", after the first
two numbers of the postal code, the northern suburbs have always
been the destination of those too poor to handle the inner city
or the more posh southern and western suburbs. Like similar districts
in every major city of the world, it has also been the target of
government attempts at wiping it off the map. Being from Chicago,
I am quite familiar with the technique, employed by the totalitarian
mayor Richard Daley, to clear out public housing structures, replace
them with a monotonous string of overpriced yuppy condominiums,
build public amusements to attract the yuppy inhabitants, and then
advertise to the world that you have helped rebuild the city. In
the north of Paris, this script has been followed almost exactly.
The build up of superstores such as Ikea and The Gap between the
"93" and Charles de Gaulle Airport began the process of
encroaching on these poor communities. Then came the construction
of the Stade de France in time for the 1998 World Cup in Saint-Denis
(just on the border of the hot region). The last step was meant
to score the 2012 Summer Olympics for the same venue, which would
have paved the road for the completion of the great "urban
renewal" project of the problem district.
Unfortunately for Chirac and Co., things have not gone according
to plan. Perhaps the unexpected loss to London in the Olympic bid
race can be seen as a fitting metaphor for the administration's
failure to kill the poor communities. However, France's frustration
in losing the bid to host the games can't be anything compared to
the frustration of those who have descended from three generations
of French residents, only to still be entirely excluded from the
main fabric of society and government.
Much of the frustration among the revolters has been aimed at Finance
Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, often called "Sarko" by disaffected
youth. It is he who has provided the tough rhetoric that has easily
fueled the fires of rage behind the current rebellion. Among other
things, Sarko has been known to regularly refer to the 93's residents
as racaille - or scum. He has threatened to clear out the streets
of the neighborhood with power hoses, and blames the locals with
instituting a depraved culture of petty crime and heavy drug use.
This is the #2 man in the government behind Prime Minister Dominique
de Villepin, and so his rhetoric carries immense weight. While some
within both major ruling parties in Parliament have begun to question
Sarko's tough talk, it's all pretty moot at this point. By allowing
Sarko to have his way for so long, the perception is that all of
government and the elite populations that support it feel this way
about the residents and citizens of the northern Banlieu.
The mainstream press, be it "left" or "Right",
has done their best to falsely turn this story into another "Clash
of Civilizations" bit. Without saying as much, they tend to
interview people with obviously Arabic names on the scene, and then
babble on about the history of Algerian and Tunisian immigration
to the area. All one needs to do is read what the interviewees are
saying to realize that this has nothing to do with any overarching
West-East dilemma. They aren't talking about the death of the West,
and their revulsion at the Judeo-Christian liberal democratic norms.
They are talking about their revulsion at socio-economic exclusion.
This doesn't have anything to do with civilization: this has to
do with Capitalism running buck wild over the human rights of thousands
of members of French society.
Just listen to the voices of the revolt. Zaid, 20, quoted in the
November 4th Independent of London, says: "It's hard to just
sit here and watch the rich people driving past in their swanky
vehicles. They have everything and we have absolutely nothing."
In the November 5th version of the Independent, Kamel, 16, says:
"Ever since Sarko came into the government, life has been merde.
He treats us like dogs -- well, we'll show him how dogs can react!"
I could draw up a list of dozens of such quotes, none of them using
religious or cultural imagery to indicate a civilization clash.
While there is a heavy population of North African Arabs in the
area, they aren't the whole story. The other half of the north Banlieue
population is made up of Blacks, immigrants from other parts of
the world, and the occasional poor white French families. This is
a widespread spectrum of the population that is feeling excluded.
One needn't pull out the Samuel Huntington boogeyman to understand
why the feeling of desperation is so high in these areas. One need
only use common sense: the largely poor and immigrant population
here is made to live in dangerously, dilapidated conditions, are
not permitted to
practice cultural traditions from home thanks to the overarching
cultural chauvinism of French society, and are not even given the
rare representative in Congress the way American and British minorities
are. Simply enough, you treat a significant portion of your population
in this disturbing way for long enough, and they will rebel.
What began as a seemingly contained bout of social disorder in
response to the electrocution of two youths being pursued by police
last week has manifested itself into nationwide revolt. The problem
areas have spread to Toulouse, Marseilles, Strasbourg, Nantes, and
other areas of the country that fit the ultra-excluded demographic
of the Northern Banlieue. The most frequent form of revolt has been
car torchings, with the biggest job being an entire Renault dealership
in Aulnay-Sous-Bois. Schools, department stores, large chains and
government buildings have also been targeted. The mainstream press
has been dutifully overemphasizing the youth aspect to the rebels,
so as to delegitimize the events. Any new violence is being referred
to as "copy cat" riots, as if those responsible are not
thinking about anything but imitating those who have come before.
This is a completely irrelevant point
insofar as the "copy cat" aspect doesn't significantly
change the overarching picture: angry, disaffected, and largely
young segments of the population with nothing better to do than
declare war on France.
The war is built upon the marked contrasts in French society. The
Paris city center is one of the richest in the world, with the West
side being lined with gold from the Champs Elysées down through
the Eiffel Tower district to the ultra posh 16th Arrondissement
(district). As Paris rests comfortably in wealth, built on family
dynasty and tourism, the suburbs toil for every last meal. If they
are lucky enough to find work (sometimes unemployment runs as high
as 50% in the suburbs), then they often work twelve hours a day,
seven days a week, just to maintain a decent living. They keep France
open by managing corner shops and laborious industrial night shifts,
and receive nothing but hate in return. Their parents and grandparents
managed to survive the often bloody onslaught of French imperialism
in Africa, and now they are made to survive the immoral onslaught
of rugged Capitalism.
France has always captured the imagination of the rebellious. Many
credit the French Revolution with being the first example of a popular
social revolution. It was followed in Paris with social rebellion
in
1848, worker upheaval in 1871, and student revolt in 1968. In 2005,
Paris is burning at the hands of the modern day proletarian population.
Just don't call them riots! These aren't forest fires. This is a
rebellion in real time.
Matt Reichel is an American expatriate currently working and studying
in Paris. He can be reached at: reichel_matt@yahoo.fr. This article
first appeared on the US website Dissident Voice at http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Nov05/Reichel1106.htm
See also:
http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Reichel.htm