Yorkshire Post

‘FRANCE IS A LITTLE BIT BROKEN’

Leïla Slimani may have been appointed by Emmanuel Macron to promote French culture around the world – but she isn’t afraid to address the nation’s problems. Chris Burn reports.

- Email: Twitter: chris.burn@jpimedia.co.uk @chrisburn_post

GIVEN HER extraordin­ary recent successes that have resulted in her being acclaimed by Vanity Fair as the second most influentia­l French person in the world, it is no surprise Leïla Slimani feels that her arrest while working as a journalist in Tunisia during the Arab Spring almost happened another lifetime ago.

“It seems very, very far away. I have the feeling it was like 20 years ago,” she tells an audience at the University of Sheffield when asked about the incident in 2010 in which she was arrested by the Tunisian army and had her computer seized, along with her photograph­er’s camera, as they covered the growing protests.

Slimani has undoubtedl­y packed a lot into the eight years that have passed instead. The 37-year-old has published two novels, with her second book

Lullaby – the tale of a French nanny to a wealthy Arab family which opens with the now-famous line ‘The baby is dead’ – selling more than 600,000 copies, being translated into 40 languages and making her the first-ever Moroccan winner of France’s most prestigiou­s literary accolade, the Prix Goncourt.

She was appointed by President Macron as his personal representa­tive in a globe-trotting role that includes being a champion of French language and culture, while also becoming a passionate advocate for women’s and LGBT rights in her home country of Morocco, where sex outside marriage, abortion and homosexual­ity is banned.

Last month, Vanity Fair placed her ahead of the President and World Cup-winning French football stars and behind only fashion designer Hedi Slimane in the global influence stakes.

Listening to her speak in Sheffield, it is clear to see why Macron wanted her to represent France on the world stage; with her great belief in individual freedom so clearly in tune with the values of the Republic; liberty, equality and fraternity.

In keeping with her commitment to free speech, Slimani doesn’t hold back on her opinions on the troubled state of France despite her role for the Government. The country has recently been rocked by the oftenviole­nt ‘gilet jaunes’ street protests at rising living costs, which forced Macron into scrapping a planned fuel tax rise and promising extra money for minimum wage earners and tax cuts for pensioners.

“The Republic for me is a lot to do with equality,” she says. “Equality is the most important for me and a lot of French people. It is a place where everyone has the possibilit­y to emancipate himself and invent himself.

“Now the Republic is a little bit broken, something is going wrong and we don’t really know how we are going to fix it. And that is very sad.”

Slimani, whose father was a highrankin­g financier and mother a doctor, says she feels guilt at her good fortune in contrast to the anger and frustratio­n of those who are struggling to make ends meet. “I was born in Morocco and belonged to the bourgeoisi­e, the upper class. In France, in a certain way I belong to the elite. I always had this feeling I was living in a bubble in Morocco and France. I know what is happening and have empathy but that is not a solution. I don’t know what we should do.

“I see this emotion everywhere – Spain, with 30 per cent unemployed, Morocco with 40 per cent unemployme­nt, in Hungary. I see it everywhere but it doesn’t mean you know what to do.

“In a certain way, I feel guilty. I did nothing wrong but I feel guilty because I know how lucky I am. It is Christmas and it won’t be difficult for me to buy a gift for my son and for my daughter. I know people who are working hard and trying their best to be a good citizen and they can’t buy a gift for their child. As a writer, I try to convey empathy and understand­ing but I don’t have a solution.”

But while her public position and literary success has many advantages, her determinat­ion to make use of her platform has made her a target for criticism across the political spectrum; from those on the left who accuse her of acting as an apologist for the French establishm­ent and its colonial past to religious conservati­ves in Morocco furious at her criticism at what she has described as their “completely medieval” laws.

In an interview earlier this year, she revealed her next book will touch on the idea of an outspoken writer who speaks dangerous truths in public, risking the safety of her own family.

She says despite her feeling of freedom in France, she is not universall­y accepted as an immigrant. Last month, after Macron was overheard giving supportive answers to a military veteran demanding the removal of “undocument­ed” immigrants from France, Slimani wrote a newspaper article criticisin­g the President.

“It seems to me that Emmanuel Macron could have defended with more force and coldness those whom this man dreams of putting out,” she wrote. “He could have told him that immigratio­n is a question so complex because it is human, painful, existentia­l. He could have reminded him that the said ‘undocument­ed’ are not without a face. They are not abstract figures on which we can happily let off steam. They are students, nannies, chefs, social scientists, writers, nurses, parents, children, breadwinne­rs.”

She tells the audience in Sheffield why she felt moved to write the piece. “When you are an immigrant, some people are looking at you and giving you the feeling that you are colonising them; this idea that we are replacing the European population. When I won the Prix Goncourt, I remember people saying, ‘See – they are replacing us’. The President and people who speak in public should be very careful with their words when they speak about immigratio­n.”

Meanwhile, efforts she is involved with to promote the French language in Africa have stirred up debates about French colonialis­m – but Slimani is insistent language should not be politicise­d in such a way.

“In Morocco, they say you should always speak Arabic, in France when they decided to teach Arabic at school many people from the extreme right said no, when you speak Arabic, you become an Islamist. No – we have poems, and music and wonderful literature. It is not the language of Islamists and when you say that, in a certain way you let them win and give them the impression that they own the language.

“I work with refugees so they can learn French as soon as they arrive. It is impossible to integrate when you can’t speak the language – if you go to the subway and can’t work out where to go.

“I have been very lucky to be raised as a free woman. I speak French because I want to speak French, no one put a gun to my head. I don’t like this idea we are victims. We are individual­s, we have freedom and can choose our own destiny. I’m not ‘post-colonial’, I’m Leïla Slimani, born in 1981 and I’m going to invent my future.”

Something is going wrong in the Republic and we don’t really know how we are going to fix it. That is very sad. I know what is happening and have empathy but that is not a solution. Leïla Slimani, author and champion of French language and culture.

 ??  ??
 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON ?? LITERARY SENSATION: Leïla Slimani works to promote French culture around the world – but is alive to problems which have led to street protests.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON LITERARY SENSATION: Leïla Slimani works to promote French culture around the world – but is alive to problems which have led to street protests.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom