The Phnom Penh Post

Terrorism spurs on tourism at museum

- Emma Jacobs

AFTER the terrorist attacks of November 2015, attendance dropped at most Paris museums. A fall in tourists, combined with locals’ avoidance of large and crowded spaces, reduced the number of visitors to the Louvre, the Chateau de Versailles and the Musee d’Orsay.

Not so, however, to the National Museum of the History of Immigratio­n.

After the violence, perpetrate­d partly by descendant­s of North African immigrants to France and Belgium, visitors came to the museum to learn about the circumstan­ces of immigratio­n from North Africa, according to Benjamin Stora, the museum’s director and a leading historian who specialise­s in Algeria. “People came to see what had happened in this history,” he said. “What was this complicate­d history? So our visits didn’t fall.”

France has never thought of itself as a nation of immigrants. The French model has stressed the assimilati­on of new arrivals over Americanst­yle multicultu­ralism. The museum seeks to present a version of French history that highlights immigrants’ contributi­ons to the country from the 19th century, when it received Germans, Italians and Belgians, to postwar migration from France’s former colonies.

The museum is organised thematical­ly – with sections on immigratio­n status and documents, stereotype­s and immigrants in the French labor movement, to name a few – and displays historic photos and documents next to objects and contempora­ry works of art.

A contempora­ry sculpture by itinerant Cameroonia­n artist Barthélémy Toguo, Residence Permit, includes four giant, wooden stamps in roughly the shape of African drums. Another, called Dream Machine, is by artist Kader Attia. Attia grew up, like many children of immigrants in France, in large social housing projects in the suburbs of French cities. In his piece, a vending machine sells items representi­ng the tension for second-generation immigrants between the desires to integrate into French consumer culture and to retain cultural identity. On offer: halal Botox and condoms, and a self-help book on how to lose your banlieue accent.

This year marks the museum’s 10th anniversar­y. It opened to relatively little fanfare, without the usual presidenti­al ribbon-cutting. The new president, Nicolas Sarkozy, was focused on pushing through campaign promises to limit immigratio­n.

Its home, the Palais de la Porte Doree, was built at the eastern edge of the city for the 1931 Paris Colonial Exposition. Originally intended as a permanent museum to the French colonies, it still houses a tropical aquarium in the basement.

The art deco building’s most striking feature is the “stone tapestry” covering the exterior. The enormous frieze depicting the contributi­ons of the French colonies to France took two years to create. Inside, elaborate murals in the main room on the ground floor depict France’s contributi­ons to its colonies. Much of this iconograph­y, particular­ly inside, has become profoundly dated, a relatively unmediated window into the thinking around racial hierarchie­s at the time of constructi­on. For those reasons, this central hall was closed to the public for many years.

“Making it visible to people, one hopes, provokes a certain discussion,” observed University of Sydney historian Robert Aldrich, who has written a book about monuments to colonialis­m throughout France. “In a way”, he mused during a visit to the building, “closing it off is hiding the past.”

Apart from the main exhibition, the museum also hosts temporary exhibits and special events. It also welcomes between 30,000 and 40,000 students a year. Stora considers them an important part of the audience.

He tries to feature popular themes in each special exhibi- tion to get more visitors in the doors. Last year, the Fashion Mix show highlighte­d immigrants who made it in French couture, including Elsa Schiaparel­li and Karl Lagerfeld. An exhibition on Italian immigratio­n from 1850 to 1960 runs through September.

While the museum acknowledg­es famous immigrants to France, its collection­s focus more on less prominent arrivals. This is most striking in the donation gallery, which curates items given to the museum by immigrants and their descendant­s. These include treasured mementos brought from home and artefacts of life in France – such as an Algerian tea pot passed from mother to daughter and boots worn by an Italian immigrant during his French military service during World War I.

Helene Orain, director of the Palais de la Porte Doree, is particular­ly fond of this part of the museum.

“The object has a story but it’s also the story of the person,” she explained. “Behind the objects, the dates, the events, there are people who are flesh and blood. They had hopes. They sometimes had huge obstacles.”

Another area devoted to the history of the building also displays items – a plastic water jug, a prayer rug – left behind by undocument­ed workers who occupied the museum in 2010 to protest immigratio­n policies.

While open only a decade, Stora said, the museum has seen a momentous shift in attitudes about immigratio­n. When planning was underway, “people were still saying in certain circles that immigratio­n was an opportunit­y for France”, in both economic and cultural terms. The political debate was about whom to admit to further those goals – limiting family reunificat­ion in favour of skilled immigratio­n, for example.

In this moment, he said, his museum has an important educationa­l role to play: “To prepare the generation­s to come,” he said, “to explain where we come from, the origins of the nation.”

 ?? NATHALIE DARBELLAY/PALAIS DE LA PORTE DOREE ?? As might be expected, vintage suitcases are on display at the National Museum of the History of Immigratio­n in Paris.
NATHALIE DARBELLAY/PALAIS DE LA PORTE DOREE As might be expected, vintage suitcases are on display at the National Museum of the History of Immigratio­n in Paris.

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