Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 89/Whitsun in the streets"
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{{tab}}Practic­ally every edu­ca­tional in­stitu­tion in Paris has been taken over: a friend of mine at a school for {{w|inter­pret­ers|Language_interpretation}}, for ex­ample, has spent the past two weeks work­ing ex­tremely hard on the de­tails of a new {{qq|con­sti­tu­tion}} for his col­lege. | {{tab}}Practic­ally every edu­ca­tional in­stitu­tion in Paris has been taken over: a friend of mine at a school for {{w|inter­pret­ers|Language_interpretation}}, for ex­ample, has spent the past two weeks work­ing ex­tremely hard on the de­tails of a new {{qq|con­sti­tu­tion}} for his col­lege. | ||
− | {{tab}}The main work of the stu­dents over the Whit week­end ap­peared to be the organ­is | + | {{tab}}The main work of the stu­dents over the Whit week­end ap­peared to be the organ­is­ing<!-- 'organisating' in original --> of groups to go to the factor­ies to help per­suade the strik­ers to con­tinue. The seri­ous­ness had not evapor­ated over the hot sunny week­end. The {{w|Odéon|Odéon-Théâtre_de_l'Europe}} on Tues­day was still packed with ardent de­bat­ers, speak­ing in rapid but ordered suc­ces­sion. The atmo­sphere was holi­day, but a heady holi­day which was no escape {{p|224}}from life, like our stand­ard fort­nights in {{w|Black­pool|Blackpool}} or {{w|Tor­remo­linos|Torremolinos}}, but a con­firm­a­tion of life. A holi­day in which every­one part­i­cip­ated, a holi­day which every­one had them­selves cre­ated (in this sense it was more than the joy­ful feel­ing of dis­rup­tion pro­duced by heavy snow­falls or power fail­ures). The crowds in the Sor­bonne did per­haps ap­pear to be mill­ing about aim­lessly, but it was the open aim­less­ness of people search­ing, ques­tion­ing, come to dis­cover the situ­a­tion and their part in it, and by their very being there they made the situ­a­tion. |
− | {{tab}}The Sor­bonne so clearly stands for some­thing, in­de­fin­able, but de­fin­itely some­thing much more than the sys­tem of human rela­tion­ships we sur­vive on at the mo­ment. Even when the pres­ent ex­cite­ment and open­ness has died down, as Cohn-<wbr>Bendit says, the people now know their power, and even if there is no im­medi­ate change in work con­di­tions and rela­tion­ships, people who feel that the mechan­ised role-<wbr>play­ing life is again over­power­ing them, can con­tinue to pro­voke crisis after crisis until the changes do oc­cur. The re­newed at­tacks upon the police of June 11th showed that the stu­dents have by no means lost hope in the re­volu­tion: and whether or not re­volu­tion is achieved, the af­flu­ence of Western so­ciety in general and the com­mit­ted posi­tion taken by so many French pro­fes­sion­als, in­tel­lec­tu­als and stu­dents, are bound to ensure that sub­stan­tial changes do oc­cur within the | + | {{tab}}The Sor­bonne so clearly stands for some­thing, in­de­fin­able, but de­fin­itely some­thing much more than the sys­tem of human rela­tion­ships we sur­vive on at the mo­ment. Even when the pres­ent ex­cite­ment and open­ness has died down, as Cohn-<wbr>Bendit says, the people now know their power, and even if there is no im­medi­ate change in work con­di­tions and rela­tion­ships, people who feel that the mechan­ised role-<wbr>play­ing life is again over­power­ing them, can con­tinue to pro­voke crisis after crisis until the changes do oc­cur. The re­newed at­tacks upon the police of June 11th showed that the stu­dents have by no means lost hope in the re­volu­tion: and whether or not re­volu­tion is achieved, the af­flu­ence of Western so­ciety in general and the com­mit­ted posi­tion taken by so many French pro­fes­sion­als, in­tel­lec­tu­als and stu­dents, are bound to ensure that sub­stan­tial changes do oc­cur within the edu­ca­tional and pro­fes­sional sys­tems. |
− | {{tab}}It is more dif­fi­cult to pre­dict what will happen in the factor­ies. But per­haps the whole feel­ing of the re­volu­tion was crys­tal­lised in the meet­ing we had with a group of anarch­ist work­ers when we were cook­ing our supper in the street in {{w|Les Halles|Les_Halles}}, dur­ing the monster traf­fic jam on the Tues­day evening. They leapt out of a café on top of us, asked us what we thought of the re­volu­tion, de­clared the strike was con­tinu­ing 100%, clenched fists, pro­claimed; {{qq|{{popup|''C{{a}}est une re­volu­tion de vivre, les patrons, les ouvriers, tous les deux''|It's a revolution | + | {{tab}}It is more dif­fi­cult to pre­dict what will happen in the factor­ies. But per­haps the whole feel­ing of the re­volu­tion was crys­tal­lised in the meet­ing we had with a group of anarch­ist work­ers when we were cook­ing our supper in the street in {{w|Les Halles|Les_Halles}}, dur­ing the monster traf­fic jam on the Tues­day evening. They leapt out of a café on top of us, asked us what we thought of the re­volu­tion, de­clared the strike was con­tinu­ing 100%, clenched fists, pro­claimed; {{qq|{{popup|''C{{a}}est une re­volu­tion de vivre, les patrons, les ouvriers, tous les deux''|It's a revolution to live, bosses and workers alike}}}}, and {{qq|{{popup|''Les syndicats sont depassés, depassés''|The unions are overtaken, overtaken}}}}, leapt into a big {{w|Citroën|Citroën}} van shout­ing they were off to the provin­ces to spread the word, and just dis­ap­peared down the street where traf­fic had been mov­ing at the rate of two car-<wbr>lengths every minute. A minute later they were gone, but leav­ing a stronger im­pres­sion on us than any other people in Paris. |
− | {| style="text-align:justify; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; border-collapse:collapse;" | + | {| style="text-align:justify; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; border-collapse:collapse;" cellpadding="4" |
|- | |- | ||
| <font size="2">'''View from the {{w|Island|United_Kingdom}}''' | | <font size="2">'''View from the {{w|Island|United_Kingdom}}''' | ||
− | {{tab}}''{{w|Chris­topher Logue|Christopher_Logue}}, poet laure­ate of the Left, asked earn­estly what We in Brit­ain could do'': ''that, said [[Author:Daniel Cohn-Bendit|Cohn-<wbr>Bendit]] wear­ily, is your prob­lem. {{w|Ken­neth Tynan|Kenneth_Tynan}}, in a kimono | + | {{tab}}''{{w|Chris­topher Logue|Christopher_Logue}}, poet laure­ate of the Left, asked earn­estly what We in Brit­ain could do'': ''that, said [[Author:Daniel Cohn-Bendit|Cohn-<wbr>Bendit]] wear­ily, is your prob­lem. {{w|Ken­neth Tynan|Kenneth_Tynan}}, in a kimono shirt, kept in­quir­ing how re­bel­lion could suc­ceed with­out army sup­port. Among icon­o­clastic cheers, Cohn-<wbr>Bendit resorted to'' (''Anglo-<wbr>Saxon'') ''four-<wbr>letter words. You felt, break­ing free of the sham­bles, that the only thing our Fidel­istas will be able to do with pav­ing stones is drop them on their feet.'' |
<div style="text-align:right">{{dash}}{{w|{{sc|the guardian}}|The_Guardian}}, 13.6.68.</div></font> | <div style="text-align:right">{{dash}}{{w|{{sc|the guardian}}|The_Guardian}}, 13.6.68.</div></font> | ||
|}</div> | |}</div> | ||
− | {{DEFAULTSORT: | + | {{DEFAULTSORT: Whitsun in the streets}} |
[[Category:Anarchist history]] | [[Category:Anarchist history]] | ||
[[Category:Labour and industry]] | [[Category:Labour and industry]] |
Latest revision as of 18:20, 17 April 2018
The most revolutionary impression of Paris over the Whitsun weekend was that of the simple freedom of movement and human contact in and around the Sorbonne; a simplicity which ought to be a natural way of behaviour, but which now comes as a surprise in a modern city.
In the Sorbonne itself there is a total lack of suspicion and interference, in spite of fears of attacks by “Occident” (a tough right-
In contrast to the freedom of the Sorbonne, there is the Ecole Des Beaux Arts, which is being run like a para-
It is presumably the sheer number of people in the Sorbonne which allows it to remain open-
However, they had no clear idea as to who they wanted to form a Government (certainly neither de Gaulle, Mitterrand nor <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: Mendes-
Despite the proliferation of revolutionary ideas at the Sorbonne, as Cohn-
I have an impression that the press is trying to exaggerate the split between the CP and the more militant left, with the object of both discrediting the CP morally, and demonstrating the ineffectiveness of the remainder: a <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: France-
One of the most hopeful signs during the revolution has been the involvement of professional groups. Le Monde ran an account of a meeting on May 23rd of 700 architects in the Institut d’Urbanisme, which gave full support to the students and decided to participate through their profession in the movement towards changing the structure of society and of the professions. They have also occupied their regional council office, and intend to hold all future meetings at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. (L’Express reports that the occupation of the architects’ regional council offices was undertaken by a group of which 90% were architects and only 10% students.)
A “Commission of Inter-
Practically every educational institution in Paris has been taken over: a friend of mine at a school for interpreters, for example, has spent the past two weeks working extremely hard on the details of a new “constitution” for his college.
The main work of the students over the Whit weekend appeared to be the organising of groups to go to the factories to help persuade the strikers to continue. The seriousness had not evaporated over the hot sunny weekend. The Odéon on Tuesday was still packed with ardent debaters, speaking in rapid but ordered succession. The atmosphere was holiday, but a heady holiday which was no escape The Sorbonne so clearly stands for something, indefinable, but definitely something much more than the system of human relationships we survive on at the moment. Even when the present excitement and openness has died down, as Cohn-
It is more difficult to predict what will happen in the factories. But perhaps the whole feeling of the revolution was crystallised in the meeting we had with a group of anarchist workers when we were cooking our supper in the street in Les Halles, during the monster traffic jam on the Tuesday evening. They leapt out of a café on top of us, asked us what we thought of the revolution, declared the strike was continuing 100%, clenched fists, proclaimed; “C’est une revolution de vivre, les patrons, les ouvriers, tous les deux”, and “Les syndicats sont depassés, depassés”, leapt into a big Citroën van shouting they were off to the provinces to spread the word, and just disappeared down the street where traffic had been moving at the rate of two car-
View from the Island
Christopher Logue, poet laureate of the Left, asked earnestly what We in Britain could do: that, said Cohn- |