Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 89/Overtaken by events: a Paris journal"
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{{tab}}That evening there was a big demon­stra­tion, called by the stu­dents to pro­test against the gov­ern­ment{{s}} ac­tion in for­bid­ding [[Author:Daniel Cohn-Bendit|Cohn-Bendit]]{{s}} re­turn to France. I took part, and it was in­deed an amaz­ing af­fair. A crowd of up to 10,­000 people, chant­ing slo­gans, but most of all, sing­ing the {{w|Inter­na­tion­ale|The_Internationale}} and chant­ing {{qq|Nous sommes tous des juifs al­le­mands}} (We are all {{w|German Jews|History_of_the_Jews_in_Germany#Jews_in_Germany_from_1945_to_the_reunification}}). I was enorm­ously moved{{dash}}as I have been time after time in these last days. We marched towards the {{w|As­sem­blée Na­tio­nale|Palais_Bourbon}}, but were not al­lowed through to demon­strate in front (that evening they were de­bat­ing the {{w|op­po­si­tion|Federation_of_the_Democratic_and_Socialist_Left}} fore­doomed {{w|cen­sure|Censure}} mo­tion). There I had my first sight of the CRS drawn up for ac­tion. I had seen them often enough in the days before, in coaches with the win­dows pro­tected by thick mesh, hang­ing around the {{w|Pont des Arts|Pont_des_Arts}}. But here they were drawn up in line three or four deep right across each of sev­eral side roads off the {{w|Bou­le­vard St. Germain|Boulevard_Saint-Germain}}, where we were, and across the bou­le­vard itself. We were thou­sands, they were I sup­pose under a hund­red in each side street, con­sider­ably more on the bou­le­vard: but, but. They wear close-<wbr>fitting, gleam­ing {{w|hel­mets|Riot_protection_helmet}}, with a double thonged strap under the chin; {{w|jack­boots|Jackboot}}; thick black uni­forms with broad heavy belts; carry heavy {{w|trun­cheons|Baton_(law_enforcement)}}. They are armed also with gren­ades dis­char­ging not only {{w|tear gas|Tear_gas}}, but other {{w|gases|Chemical_weapon}} of vari­ous sorts, some of them said to be banned by the {{l|Geneva Con­ven­tion|https://www.un.org/disarmament/wmd/bio/1925-geneva-protocol}}, some, cer­tainly, of which the de­tails are secret, so that the ci­vil­ian doc­tors who treated vic­tims after the first night of the bar­ri­cades had them­selves no ac­cur­ate in­form­a­tion to guide them in treat­ment. The CRS look awfully like the {{w|SS|Schutzstaffel}} men of the war films. Cer­tainly they would have made ex­cel­lent SS men. They are, whether by na­ture or by train­ing, fitted to be {{w|con­cen­tra­tion camp|Internment}} guards. If called on to sup­port my as­ser­tion that man is a stain on na­ture, the cata­strophe of this planet, whose de­struc­tion would be a bless­ing of un­ima­gin­able magni­tude; if chal­lenged by some {{w|human­ist|Humanism}} to sup­port this con­ten­tion not by history, but {{p|208}}by living spe­ci­mens, and if I couldn{{t}} for the mo­ment find any con­cen­tra­tion camp guards or {{w|Ku Klux Klanners|Ku_Klux_Klan}} (I have men­tioned only two, and those chosen only from the ranks of those who per­se­cute their own species){{dash}}why, then a CRS man would re­fute my hypo­thet­ical human­ist quite as ad­equately as {{w|Johnson|Lyndon_B._Johnson}}{{s}} stone re­futed {{w|Berkeley|1960s_Berkeley_protests}}. (I am quite aware of the im­plica­tions of this com­par­ison.) | {{tab}}That evening there was a big demon­stra­tion, called by the stu­dents to pro­test against the gov­ern­ment{{s}} ac­tion in for­bid­ding [[Author:Daniel Cohn-Bendit|Cohn-Bendit]]{{s}} re­turn to France. I took part, and it was in­deed an amaz­ing af­fair. A crowd of up to 10,­000 people, chant­ing slo­gans, but most of all, sing­ing the {{w|Inter­na­tion­ale|The_Internationale}} and chant­ing {{qq|Nous sommes tous des juifs al­le­mands}} (We are all {{w|German Jews|History_of_the_Jews_in_Germany#Jews_in_Germany_from_1945_to_the_reunification}}). I was enorm­ously moved{{dash}}as I have been time after time in these last days. We marched towards the {{w|As­sem­blée Na­tio­nale|Palais_Bourbon}}, but were not al­lowed through to demon­strate in front (that evening they were de­bat­ing the {{w|op­po­si­tion|Federation_of_the_Democratic_and_Socialist_Left}} fore­doomed {{w|cen­sure|Censure}} mo­tion). There I had my first sight of the CRS drawn up for ac­tion. I had seen them often enough in the days before, in coaches with the win­dows pro­tected by thick mesh, hang­ing around the {{w|Pont des Arts|Pont_des_Arts}}. But here they were drawn up in line three or four deep right across each of sev­eral side roads off the {{w|Bou­le­vard St. Germain|Boulevard_Saint-Germain}}, where we were, and across the bou­le­vard itself. We were thou­sands, they were I sup­pose under a hund­red in each side street, con­sider­ably more on the bou­le­vard: but, but. They wear close-<wbr>fitting, gleam­ing {{w|hel­mets|Riot_protection_helmet}}, with a double thonged strap under the chin; {{w|jack­boots|Jackboot}}; thick black uni­forms with broad heavy belts; carry heavy {{w|trun­cheons|Baton_(law_enforcement)}}. They are armed also with gren­ades dis­char­ging not only {{w|tear gas|Tear_gas}}, but other {{w|gases|Chemical_weapon}} of vari­ous sorts, some of them said to be banned by the {{l|Geneva Con­ven­tion|https://www.un.org/disarmament/wmd/bio/1925-geneva-protocol}}, some, cer­tainly, of which the de­tails are secret, so that the ci­vil­ian doc­tors who treated vic­tims after the first night of the bar­ri­cades had them­selves no ac­cur­ate in­form­a­tion to guide them in treat­ment. The CRS look awfully like the {{w|SS|Schutzstaffel}} men of the war films. Cer­tainly they would have made ex­cel­lent SS men. They are, whether by na­ture or by train­ing, fitted to be {{w|con­cen­tra­tion camp|Internment}} guards. If called on to sup­port my as­ser­tion that man is a stain on na­ture, the cata­strophe of this planet, whose de­struc­tion would be a bless­ing of un­ima­gin­able magni­tude; if chal­lenged by some {{w|human­ist|Humanism}} to sup­port this con­ten­tion not by history, but {{p|208}}by living spe­ci­mens, and if I couldn{{t}} for the mo­ment find any con­cen­tra­tion camp guards or {{w|Ku Klux Klanners|Ku_Klux_Klan}} (I have men­tioned only two, and those chosen only from the ranks of those who per­se­cute their own species){{dash}}why, then a CRS man would re­fute my hypo­thet­ical human­ist quite as ad­equately as {{w|Johnson|Lyndon_B._Johnson}}{{s}} stone re­futed {{w|Berkeley|1960s_Berkeley_protests}}. (I am quite aware of the im­plica­tions of this com­par­ison.) | ||
+ | {{tab}}But the CRS have made their first ap­pear­ance, having shown them­selves sin­is­ter, bulky, black, black, medium long shot, a brood­ing pres­ence which we know we shall see more of; so, we shall leave them. They will be heard from. To be con­tinued in our next. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}On Thurs­day morn­ing I went again to J.P.{{s}} flat, and con­firmed that the {{popup|ms.|manuscript}} was in­deed part of the {{qq|un­fin­ished}} novel. When I told J.P. this he was in­cred­u­lous, and we de­cided I should look through the docu­ments for the ms. of the pub­lished sec­tion; it was miss­ing, and I could not find it. The new ms. is about 30,000 words long, and I estim­ated that with the al­ready pub­lished sec­tion we had at least 80 per cent of the novel. I left a note for J.P.{{dash}}I was now very ex­cited about this find. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}(From a liter­ary point of view we are doing well; we have two good plots going, one so­cial and polit­ical, one aca­demic and per­sonal. Will the sin­is­ter CRS de­stroy the vali­ant anarch­ist forum by asking them ques­tions they can{{t}} answer? Is our hero{{s}} find really the long-<wbr>lost finale of {{w|Schubert|Franz_Schubert}}{{s}} {{w|Un­fin­ished Sym­phony|Symphony_No._8_(Schubert)}}? Will the black uni­forms tear up the black flag of the anarch­ists and steal the pre­cious manu­script? Will the goodies beat the baddies in the end? Read to­morrow{{s}} breath­taking thrill-<wbr>a-<wbr>minute edition of {{w|''Le Monde''|Le_Monde}}.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Coming back from J.P.{{s}} flat, I had some­thing to eat (I had not stopped all day) and then walked through the {{w|Place St. Michel|Place_Saint-Michel}} on the way to the Sor­bonne. It was about six o{{a}}clock, and the usual strollers were around. There was no dis­order: yet a squad of CRS had just formed up at the end of the {{w|Pont St. Michel|Pont_Saint-Michel}}, across the whole width of the road, block­ing the bridge, carry­ing their large black {{w|shields|Riot_shield}}, ready for ac­tion. There was not the slight­est need for this: no demon­stra­tion had been called for that evening, and none was tak­ing place. If the au­thor­it­ies felt the CRS were ne­ces­sary to keep order (which seems un­likely, since the ef­fect of their ap­pear­ance in this way served ex­actly the op­po­site pur­pose), they could have stayed in their coaches, parked nearby, as they had done before, ready to inter­vene if needed. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}I went to the Sor­bonne and had a talk with some people I had ment, two couples, one an eld­erly rail­way­man and his wife, all anarch­ists. I don{{t}} know what time it was when I left them, but we had heard that there was al­ready trouble at the Place St. Michel, and I headed back there. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}That was the flash­point of Thurs­day night{{s}} riots. The police bar­rier had at­tracted a large crowd, many of them stu­dents, and in­sults had been hurled at the CRS. It is farily cer­tain that many of those who hurled the in­sults were {{qq|{{w|pro­vocateurs|Agent_provocateur}}}}, in­tend­ing to start trouble; it is less easy to say whether they were ex­trem­ists from the left wing or the right, or even, im­prob­able though it sounds, work­ing for the gov­ern­ment, {{p|209}}to give the public the im­pres­sion that the stu­dents were in the wrong for start­ing it all. Anyway, the in­evit­able fin­ally hap­pened, stones and rub­bish were thrown at the CRS, back came gas gren­ades, and the Place St. Michel and the {{l|Place St. André des Arts|https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_Saint-Andr%C3%A9-des-Arts}} be­came a battle­field. The {{qq|service d{{a}}ordre}} of the stu­dents tried in every way they could to stop it, but it was use­less, partly be­cause of the ex­aspir­a­tion, partly be­cause of the feel­ing of solid­ar­ity. The police ad­vanced, the gren­ades and the stones flew, and soon the {{w|pavé|Cobblestone}} was being dug up, the thick pierced iron plates that sur­round the base of the trees pulled up, and bar­ri­cades went up on the Bou­le­vard St. Michel. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}The CRS had four enorm­ous lorries side by side across the whole width of the Bou­le­vard, ad­van­cing slowly up­hill. Night had fallen, and the tear gas was so thick that it was dif­fi­cult to see even if your eyes were not stream­ing tears. Through the haze came flashes{{dash}}some­times the lights of news photo­graph­ers, some­times, I think, some form of gren­ade strik­ing. The CRS don{{t}} throw the gren­ades, they have mech­an­ical throw­ers which send them a long dis­tance and with con­sider­able velo­city, which in itself con­sti­tutes a con­sider­able hazard when the gren­ades are thrown hap­hazard into a crowd. I can test­ity to this, as I in­volun­tar­ily stopped a gas gren­ade with my left leg, get­ting a large bruise and a severe limp. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}I was very fright­ened. I do not think I am a coward. I think that given a rifle and prefer­ably a little train­ing, I could fight. If they are over there with rifles and wee are over here with rifles, I do not think I would run. But to stand your ground with no weapon, no pro­tec­tion{{dash|God, how del­ic­ate and fra­gile this flesh stuff is when there is a bang, and you find you are run­ning}}to ignore the tear gas{{dash}}which is bad, there is no doubt: you can stand it quite a time, at least I can, but comes a mo­ment when you are blinded, when your eyes burn un­con­trol­lably and you are in the middle of the Bou­le­vard St. Michel and there are two enorm­ous bangs, you can{{t}} open your eyes and you are run­ning across this naked flat plain stretch­ing away to the kerb, and blun­der­ing into people as blind as you, your eyes burn­ing, until you stag­ger into a shop front and put some­thing hard be­tween you and the fly­ing gren­ades and then stumble away along the houses try­ing to keep your eyes shut with the terror of the newly blind for­cing them open, trying to see to run away from this hell. And if you run far enough, out of the worst of the gas, and your eyes stop burn­ing, you look back and see that you have escaped from hell, the hell of the medi­eval paint­ers. All around, black­ness, and in the centre, il­lum­in­ated by the tall lick­ing flames from the bar­ri­cades, hazy and flick­er­ing against the fires, through the steam-<wbr>cloud of gas you see dan­cing fig­ures, male and female, yell­ing and jump­ing, bend­ing down to pick up some­thing to throw it through the flames into the cloud and dark­ness beyond. Around them, crashes and bangs, and from a cyl­in­der on the ground the smoke rushes as if an im­prisoned genie had been let loose: you ex­pect him to form in the upper dark­ness and loom above the fig­ures, who duck and run, and then go back to face that huge dark­ness beyond. And you know what sort of courage that is, and you know you haven{{t}} got it. | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 19:02, 8 April 2018
a Paris journal
So it was, perhaps, in the first instance, but things have changed. The students have taken over the University completely. The lecture rooms are crowded with committees discussing the whole movement—
And what will come out of it? Not much perhaps: in fact, my guess would be, concessions in words from the government, soothing noises, a few reforms, a scapegoat or two—
4.10 a.m. Les Halles, always a sight worth seeing—
View from the Island
On Saturday the Students’ Union held its defiant demonsration. Boycotted once more by the communists, dismissed as pointless folly or crazy adventurism by many well- |
I am writing this in the courtyard of the Sorbonne. I look up to the roof, and there flying in the wind is a sight I have never seen before: a flag with no decoration, no addition, no national symbol: a plain red flag. And I can’t stop myself from shedding tears.
8.45 p.m. Saturday, May 25th. I ought to have kept a detailed day-On Friday, I did a little work at the Bibliothèque Nationale, very unenthusiastically. On Saturday, however, I got very interested in a particular edition of a novel which seemed matter for an article, and worked madly all day. I was at the Sorbonne again that evening; that was the night I went on to the Odéon.
The Odéon Théâtre de France was taken over by students, including drama students, and was thrown open 24 hours a day as a free forum for discussion. It is a remarkable sight, the house packed with people, and three or four organisers in the centre aisle trying to direct the discussion. I say trying, because it is an appallingly difficult task. What happens roughly is that everyone is invited to put forward his views, and at any given moment, in a crowded theatre, a number of people would like to air their opinions, whether from delight in hearing their own voice, pleasure in showing off before a large audience, violent disagreement with the last speaker or the one three before him, disagreement with some other aspect such as the whole idea of a free forum unless it allows only the expression of the correct views, disagreement with the handling of the proceedings, desire to beat the last speaker’s head in, wish to break up the proceedings, desire to help along the argument, or a wish to silence everyone who is making such a racket and spoiling the whole affair for everyone, and why do all these people yell so that you can’t hear the speaker, so you bawl at the top of your voice “SILENCE”.
And yet there is— Then I slept on Sunday till nearly midday, got up and went to the ménagerie at the Jardin des Plantes. I fed peanuts to the elephant, admired the alligators, crocodiles, turtles ant tortoises, flamingoes, saw a just-
I continued to the Bois de Vincennes, and there, in search of some green and perhaps a goose or two, failing which, a mallard, I passed through quite the largest functioning fairground I ever saw. Well, it was marked green on the map. However, I got to the other end and found green—
I stopped near a rather short middle aged man who, at a spot where the grass had been swept away to allow the gravel path to go to the edge of the water, was complaining bitterly. It appears that the gentleman was feeding the ducks, and had thrown bread near one of two cygnets. When a duckling had gone after it, one of the swan parents had attacked him—
On Monday I went to the BN, but they were short-
Wednesday morning I called on J.P., who seems to be quite a pleasant fellow. I worked there from 10 till 1, poking by nose in that time into all twenty-
View from the East
France is the first Western country to demonstrate that the social mechanism created two centuries ago does not correspond to the needs any more. The revolutionary action that has served notice that the idea of a workers’ self- |
But the CRS have made their first appearance, having shown themselves sinister, bulky, black, black, medium long shot, a brooding presence which we know we shall see more of; so, we shall leave them. They will be heard from. To be continued in our next.
On Thursday morning I went again to J.P.’s flat, and confirmed that the ms. was indeed part of the “unfinished” novel. When I told J.P. this he was incredulous, and we decided I should look through the documents for the ms. of the published section; it was missing, and I could not find it. The new ms. is about 30,000 words long, and I estimated that with the already published section we had at least 80 per cent of the novel. I left a note for J.P.—
(From a literary point of view we are doing well; we have two good plots going, one social and political, one academic and personal. Will the sinister CRS destroy the valiant anarchist forum by asking them questions they can’t answer? Is our hero’s find really the long-
Coming back from J.P.’s flat, I had something to eat (I had not stopped all day) and then walked through the Place St. Michel on the way to the Sorbonne. It was about six o’clock, and the usual strollers were around. There was no disorder: yet a squad of CRS had just formed up at the end of the Pont St. Michel, across the whole width of the road, blocking the bridge, carrying their large black shields, ready for action. There was not the slightest need for this: no demonstration had been called for that evening, and none was taking place. If the authorities felt the CRS were necessary to keep order (which seems unlikely, since the effect of their appearance in this way served exactly the opposite purpose), they could have stayed in their coaches, parked nearby, as they had done before, ready to intervene if needed.
I went to the Sorbonne and had a talk with some people I had ment, two couples, one an elderly railwayman and his wife, all anarchists. I don’t know what time it was when I left them, but we had heard that there was already trouble at the Place St. Michel, and I headed back there.
That was the flashpoint of Thursday night’s riots. The police barrier had attracted a large crowd, many of them students, and insults had been hurled at the CRS. It is farily certain that many of those who hurled the insults were “provocateurs”, intending to start trouble; it is less easy to say whether they were extremists from the left wing or the right, or even, improbable though it sounds, working for the government, The CRS had four enormous lorries side by side across the whole width of the Boulevard, advancing slowly uphill. Night had fallen, and the tear gas was so thick that it was difficult to see even if your eyes were not streaming tears. Through the haze came flashes—
I was very frightened. I do not think I am a coward. I think that given a rifle and preferably a little training, I could fight. If they are over there with rifles and wee are over here with rifles, I do not think I would run. But to stand your ground with no weapon, no protection—