The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Honor for Josephine Baker stirs conflict over racism

Some say country’s official doctrine masks racial divide.

- By Arno Pedram

On the surface, it’s a powerful message against racism: A Black woman will, for the first time, join other luminaries interred in France’s Pantheon. But by choosing a U.s.-born figure entertaine­r Josephine Baker critics say France is continuing a long tradition of decrying racism abroad while obscuring it at home.

While Baker is widely appreciate­d in France, the decision has highlighte­d the divide between the country’s official doctrine of colorblind universali­sm and some increasing­ly vocal opponents, who argue that it has masked generation­s of systemic racism.

Baker’s entry into the Pantheon today is the result of years of efforts from politician­s, organizati­ons and public figures. Most recently, a petition by Laurent Kupferman, an essayist on the French Republic, gained traction, and in July, French President Emmanuel Macron announced Baker would be “pantheoniz­ed.”

“The times are probably more conducive to having Josephine Baker’s fights resonate: the fight against racism, antisemiti­sm, her part in the French Resistance,” Kupferman told The Associated Press. “The Pantheon is where you enter not because you’re famous but because of what you bring to the civic mind of the nation.”

Her nomination has been lauded as uncontrove­rsial and seen as a way to reconcile French society after the difficulti­es of the pandemic and last year’s protests against French police violence, as George Floyd’s killing in the U.S. echoed incidents in France involving Black men who died in police custody.

Baker represente­d France’s “universali­st” approach, which sees its people simply as citizens and does not count or identify them by race or ethnicity. The first article of the constituti­on says the French Republic and its values are considered universal, ensuring that all citizens have the same rights, regardless of their origin, race or religion.

In 1938, Baker joined what is today called LICRA, a prominent antiracist league and longtime advocate for her entry in the Pantheon.

“She loved universali­sm passionate­ly and this France that does not care about skin color,” LICRA President Mario Stasi told The Associated Press. “When she arrived from the United States, she understood she came from a ‘communauta­urist’ country where she was reminded of her origin and ethnicity, and in France, she felt total acceptance.”

Universali­sts pejorative­ly call opposing anti-racism activists “communauta­rists,” implying that they put community identity before universal French citizenry. Radical anti-racist groups, meanwhile, say that France first needs a reckoning with systemic racism — a term that is contested here — and the specific oppression experience­d by different communitie­s of color.

Theterm“communauta­rist” is also used to describe American society, which counts race in official censuses, academic studies and public discourse, which is taboo in France and seen as reducing people to a skin color.

For Rokhaya Diallo, a French commentato­r on issues related to race, “universali­sm is a utopia and myth that the republic tells about itself that does not correspond to any past or present reality,” she told The AP. “For Black and nonwhite people, the Republic has always been a space of inequality, of othering through the processes triggered by colonizati­on.”

Baker was among several prominent Black Americans, especially artists and writers, who found refuge from American racism in France after the two World Wars, including the famed writer and intellectu­al James Baldwin.

But Françoise Vergès, a political scientist on questions of culture, race and colonizati­on, said “symbolic gestures” like putting Baker in the Pantheon aren’t enough to extinguish racial discrimina­tion in France.

In addition to her stage fame, Baker also spied for the French Resistance, marched alongside the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Washington, and raised what she called her “rainbow tribe” of children adopted from around the world.

For Stasi, her “fight is universali­st, so nationalit­y in some way is irrelevant . ... She perfectly inscribes herself in the (French) fight for ‘Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.’ ”

 ?? AP 1970 ?? Josephine Baker represente­d France’s “universali­st” approach, which sees its people simply as citizens.
AP 1970 Josephine Baker represente­d France’s “universali­st” approach, which sees its people simply as citizens.

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