Cape Argus

Noah's irk: French upset by Africa quip.

- BETHONIE BUTLER

AFTER France triumphed in the Fifa World Cup, The Daily Show host Trevor Noah was ready to celebrate.

“I’m so excited,” he said on his show on Monday, breaking into a little ditty. “Africa won the World Cup! Africa won the World Cup!” he sang, before joking that “you don’t get that tan by hanging out in the south of France.”

Noah was recognisin­g the multi-ethnic background of France’s team, which – as noted by The Washington Post’s Ishaan Tharoor – topped a list of World Cup teams with the most diversity. It was a joke you might expect from Noah, a South African and the son of a white father and black mother.

But as Noah informed an audience recently in between scenes while filming his Comedy Central show, Gerard Araud, France’s ambassador to the US, didn’t find the joke funny.

“I heard your words about ‘an African victory’,” Araud wrote in a letter the host read to his guests. “Nothing could be less true.”

“Now, first of all… I could have said they were Scandinavi­an,” Noah joked. “That would have been less true.”

Noah read more of the letter, which was posted to the French Embassy’s official Facebook page, in a faux French accent. Araud noted that “all but two out of 23 of the players “were born in France, they were educated in France, they learnt to play soccer in France, they are French citizens.”

“They are proud of their country, France. The rich and various background­s of these players is a reflection of France’s diversity,” Araud said.

“Now that line there was interestin­g, I think it’s more a reflection of France’s colonialis­m,” he added, drawing applause from the audience.

Noah read another paragraph of Araud’s letter, in which the ambassador noted that “unlike in the United States of America, France does not refer to its citizens based on their race, religion or origin. To us, there is no hyphenated identity, roots are an individual reality. By calling them an African team, it seems you are only denying their Frenchness.”

“This, even in jest, legitimise­s the ideology which claims whiteness as the only definition of being French,” Araud wrote.

“I understand what he’s saying because I read up on this afterwards,” Noah told his audience, explaining that “a lot of Nazis” in France attack the African descent of the team’s players and urge them to “go back to where you came from.”

But Noah said Araud’s letter ignored something he saw as an African native, watching the World Cup in the US.

“Black people all over the world were celebratin­g the Africannes­s of the French players. Not in a negative way, but rather in a positive way, going, ‘Look at these Africans who can become French.’ You know what I mean? It’s a celebratio­n of that achievemen­t,” Noah said.

He found it “weird” that people would argue the players are French and not African. “Why can’t they be both? Why is that duality only afforded to a select group of people?”

Noah’s full response, featured in an eight-minute clip posted to “The Daily Show’s” Twitter page, didn’t seem to change the ambassador’s mind.

“End of the argument with @ TrevorNoah,” Araud tweeted on Thursday morning. – Washington Post

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 ??  ?? The French ambassador to the US, Gerard Araud, didn’t take kindly to Trevor Noah’s comments about France’s World Cup victory.
The French ambassador to the US, Gerard Araud, didn’t take kindly to Trevor Noah’s comments about France’s World Cup victory.
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