761 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
761 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
FRANCE 1968
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from Workers Solidarity No 39
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paper of the Irish anarchist
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Workers Solidarity Movement
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THESE DAYS you are more likely to hear the
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word 'revolution' on the soundtrack of a
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film or on the latest pop release than you
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are to hear someone talking about bringing
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one about. It is partly for this reason
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that people think of revolutions as buried
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deep in history. Yet, as little as 25
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years ago France was on the verge of a
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total revolt with 12 million workers on
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strike, 122 factories occupied, and
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students fighting against the old moribund
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system in which they found themselves.
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In the late sixties in France real wages
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were on the rise, but large sections of the
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working class were still suffering from low
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pay. This was despite foreign trade having
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tripled. 25% of all workers were receiving
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less than 500 francs (#46) per month. Some
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unskilled workers were only getting 400
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francs per month. Unemployment was at half
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a million, in a period which was considered
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a post-war boom. Trade union membership
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had dropped to around 3 million, as opposed
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to 7 million in 1945. Not many victories
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had been won in the preceding years.
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Michelin boasted that they had only talked
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to trade unions three times in thirty
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years. So how did everything change so
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quickly in the France of 1968?
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Nanterre was a university outside Paris. It was a
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new souless campus built to cater for the
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increased influx of students. The place was
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unlike the throbbing cultural live wire of the
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famous Latin Quarter (Left Bank).
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On March 22nd 1968 eight students broke into the
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Dean's office as a way to protest at the recent
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arrest of six members of the National Vietnam
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Committee. Among these was a sociology student
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called Danny Cohn-Bendit. He had been part of a
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group who organised a strike of 10,000 to 12,000
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students in November of 1967 as a protest against
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overcrowding.
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STUDENT ANGER
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In the preceding 10 years the student population
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had risen from 170,000 to 514,000. Although the
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state had provided some funding this was not equal
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to the huge influx of students it had asked the
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universities and colleges to take. The total area
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covered by university premises had doubled since
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1962 but the student numbers had almost tripled.
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Facilities were desperately inadequate and
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overcrowding was a serious issue.
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Six days after the occupation of the Dean's office
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the police were called in and the campus was
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surrounded. 500 students inside the college
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divided into discussion groups. Sociology
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students began to boycott their exams and a
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pamphlet was produced entitled 'Why do we need
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sociologists?'. The students called for a lecture
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hall to be permanently made available for
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political discussions.
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The lecturers began to split, some in favour of
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the student demands. The college did provide a
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room, but by the 2nd of April a meeting of 1,200
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students was held in one of the main lecture
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halls.
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MARCH 22nd MOVEMENT
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After the Easter break agitation was more rampant.
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On April 22nd (one month after the occupation) a
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meeting was held in lecture hall B1. It was
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attended by 1,500 students and the resulting
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manifesto called for "Outright rejection of the
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Capitalist Technocratic University" and followed
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this by a call for solidarity with the working
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class. It was clear that the March 22nd Movement
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(which had come together as a semi-formal alliance
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of anti-authoritarian socialist students) was
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winning the battle of ideas in the campus amongst
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their fellow students.
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The college decided to discipline eight of the
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students involved, including Cohn-Bendit. They
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were called upon to appear before the disciplinary
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committee of the Sorbonne on May 3rd. Four
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lecturers volunteered to defend them.
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The education strike had not interested the
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Minister for Education. There were major
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industrial strikes the preceding year at
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Rhodiaceta and Saviem. In Rhodiaceta (a synthetic
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fibres factory in Lyons) a strike took place
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involving 14,000 workers over 23 days. Management
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went on to sack 92 militants at the end of the
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year and had also resorted to lock-outs. In June
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of 1967 Peugeot called in riot police during a
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dispute and two workers were killed.
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>From March to May 1968 there was a total of eighty
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cases of industrial action at the Renault
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Billancourt car plant. It was becoming obvious
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that "the French did not interest their leaders"
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as Alain Touraine (a professor at Nanterre who was
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prepared to defend the student action) said. These
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leaders were soon about to be awoken from their
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oblivious slumber.
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RED & BLACK FLAGS DRAPE THE ARC DE TRIOMPHE
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On Friday May 3rd a few students gathered in the
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front square of the Sorbonne. The students were
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from Nanterre and they were joined by activists
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from the Sorbonne college itself. The 'Nanterre
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Eight' were about to face charges on the following
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Monday. The eight and some colleagues from
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Nanterre were meeting student activists from the
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Sorbonne to discuss the impending Monday.
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The crowd began to swell and the college
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authorities panicked. By 4pm the Sorbonne was
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surrounded by police and the Campagnies
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Republicaines de Securite (CRS riot police).
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Students were being arrested by the CRS, on the
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basis that they were spotted wearing motorcycle
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helmets. News spread rapidly and students came
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from all over the city. Fighting began to free
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those who had already been arrested. Such was
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this battle between students and police that the
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college closed.
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This was only the second time in 700 years that
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the Sorbonne was forced to close, the other time
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being in 1940 when the Nazis took Paris.
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The National Union of Students (UNEF) and the
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Lecturers' Union (SNESup) immediately called a
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strike and issued the following demands
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1. Re-Open the Sorbonne.
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2. Withdraw the Police.
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3. Release those arrested.
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These unions were joined by the March 22nd
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Movement. The original discontent had arisen from
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overcrowding but it now began to take on a larger
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perspective.
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POLICE RIOT
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On Monday May 6th the 'Nanterre 8' passed through
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a police cordon singing the 'Internationale'.
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They were on their way to appear before the
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University Discipline Committee. The students
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decided to march through Paris. On their return
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to the Latin Quarter they were savagely attacked
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by the police on the Rue St. Jacques.
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The students tore up paving stones and overturned
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cars to form barricades. Police pumped Tear Gas
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into the air and called for reinforcements. The
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Boulevard St Germain became a bloody battleground
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with the official figures at the end of the day
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reading: 422 arrests and 345 policemen injured.
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This day was to go into the annals of '68 as
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"Bloody Monday".
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A long march followed on the Tuesday and by
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outmanouvering the police Red & Black Flags were
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draped from the Arc De Triomphe and the
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'Internationale' echoed around the streets. The
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week continued on in a similar fashion and the
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streets were alive with crowds and talk of
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politics. By Wednesday public opinion was
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shifting.
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STOMACH FOR A FIGHT
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The middle classes were appalled by the brutality
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dished out to the students by the police and large
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sections of the working class were inspired by the
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students' stomach for a fight against the state.
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On Friday (May 10th) 30,000 students, including
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high school students, had gathered around the
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Place Defret-Rochercau. They marched towards the
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Sorbonne along the Boulevard St. Germain. All
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roads leading off the boulevard were blocked by
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police armed for conflict.
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Fifty barricades were erected by the demonstrators
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in preparation for an attack by the police. Jean
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Jacques Lebel a reporter wrote that by 1am
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"Literally thousands help build barricades
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...women, workers, bystanders, people in pyjamas,
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human chains to carry rocks, wood, iron". "Our
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barricade is double: one three foot high row of
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cobble stones, an empty space of twenty yards,
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then a nine foot high pile of wood, cars, metal
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posts, dustbins. Our weapons are stones, metal,
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etc found in the street." reported one eye
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witness.
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Radio reporters said that as many as sixty
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barricades were erected in different streets.
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France stayed up to listen to reports on Europe
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One and Radio Luxembourg. The government had
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yielded on two of the three demands but would not
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release those arrested. There was to be no
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"Liberez nos comrades! ".
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THE BEAT GOES ON
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The barricades were attacked by the police. They
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used tear gas and CS grenades. Students and
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demonstrators used handkerchiefs soaked in baking
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soda to protect themselves from the nauseous
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gasses. Fighting continued throughout the night.
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Houses were stormed by the police and people were
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dragged and clubbed as they were thrown into vans.
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The police, and in particular the CRS, were most
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brutal in their treatment of the demonstrators.
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There were reports of pregnant women being beaten.
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Young men were stripped and some had their sexual
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organs beaten until the flesh was in ribbons. At
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the end of this battle of the streets there were
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367 people injured, and 460 arrested. On Saturday
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morning troop carriers were brought in to clear
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the barricades and they were booed and hissed as
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they drove down the Boulevard St Germain.
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On Monday May 13th the students were released but
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the spark had already started the forest fire.
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The trade unions called a one-day strike and a
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march was organised in Paris for the same day.
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Over 200,000 people (a conservative figure) turned
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up for the march shouting "De Gaulle Assassin".
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The leader of the government was now singled out
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as an enemy by the people. After the march there
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was a call for the crowd to disperse and many did
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but a large group of students decided that they
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would occupy the Sorbonne.
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COMMUNISTS UP TO THEIR OLD TRICKS.
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The PCF (French Communist Party) had condemned the
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Nanterre rebels from the start. Their future
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General Secretary, Georges Marchais, published an
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article entitled "False revolutionaries to be
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unmasked". In this article he claimed the March
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22nd Movement were "mostly sons of the grand
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bourgeois, contemptuous towards the students of
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working class origin" and predicted that they
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would "quickly snuff out their revolutionary
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flames to become directors in Papa's
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business....."
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But by May 8th the when the party leadership saw
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the size of the movement they changed their tune
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and attempted to take control of the uprising.
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They saw that the example of the students was now
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being followed in the workplaces. They thought it
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better to be seen encouraging action than letting
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the situation escape their control.
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Once again the Communists had misjudged the
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situation. The CGT (the Communist dominated trade
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union) leadership also started to support
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workplace action, though only after workers had
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already taken the lead. Louis Aragon (France's
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most famous Communist writer) was sent to address
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a meeting at the Odeon. Those of the March 22nd
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Movement who were present jeered and heckled him
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throughout with satirical cries of "Long live
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Stalin, father of all people".
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One member of the political bureau Roger Garudy
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embraced the students' doctrine of economic self-
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management, autonomous councils and
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decentralisation. Along with extending solidarity
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with the aims of the students he also applauded
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the events of the "Prague Spring". He was soon
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expelled from the PCF.
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TRUTH IS WHATEVER SERVES THE PARTY
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Mostly, the PCF persisted in classifying the
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student movement as "an entire ultra-left, petty-
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bourgeois cocktail of Bakunin, Trotskyism and
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plain adventurism...". Around this time an
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anonymous article was published in the party paper
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'L'Humanite'. It's author claimed that the
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Minister for Youth had "contacts" with Cohn-Bendit
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and that money was granted to the March 22nd
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Movement. This accusation was a complete
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fabrication and the height of some very strange
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imagination. This, of course, was neither the
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first nor last time the Communists resorted to
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this type of tactic.
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The Sorbonne became transformed overnight as
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posters of Marx, Lenin, and Mao decorated the old
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pillars surrounding the front square. Red & Black
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flags hung alongside the Vietcong flag. Trotsky,
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Castro and Che Guevara pictures were plastered on
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walls alongside slogans such as "Everything is
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Possible" and "It is Forbidden to Forbid". This
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picture of the Sorbonne gives a good indication of
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the confusion of ideologies encompassed within the
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student movement.
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A fifteen person occupation committee was elected
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on the May 14th and its mandate was limited to 24
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hours. The central amphitheatre was pulsating day
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and night with political debate. The examination
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system was condemned as "being the rite of
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initiation into the capitalist society". The
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March 22nd Movement wanted to "eradicate the
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distinction between workers and managers rather
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than turn more workers' sons into managers".
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REVOLUTIONARY COLLECTABLES
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The Ecole de Beux Arts (School of Fine Arts) was
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occupied on May 14th. There were meetings every
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morning at which themes were chosen. Then posters
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would be produced via a silk screen production
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basis. It was most ironic that these posters
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became almost immediately collectors' items and
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were soon to be found in the homes of the rich.
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The posters were covered with such slogans as
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"Mankind will not live free until the last
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capitalist has been hanged with the entrails of
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the last bureaucrat". "The general will against
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the will of the general". "Commodities are the
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opium of the people". Paris was plastered with
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such posters.
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The political atmosphere of the time led to
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occupations by radical doctors, architects, and
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writers. Even the Cannes film festival was
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disrupted in 1968 when "Jean-Luc Godard and
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Francois Truffaut seized the festival hall in
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support of the national strike movement".
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STRIKES
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On the 14th of May the workers of Sud Aviation
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near Nantes occupied their factory. Then Renault
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plants at Cleon, Flins, Le Mans and Boulogne
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Billancourt all went on strike. Young workers at
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Cleon refused to leave the factory at the end of
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their shift and locked the manager into his
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office. The union leadership were stumbling
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behind the mood of the workers. At places like
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Sud-Aviation the decision to go on indefinite
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strike was taken by the workers without consulting
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the union officials.
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The CGT leaders had been taken totally by surprise
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and now were desperately trying not to lose all
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influence. The workers were leading, in their
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demands and actions. The union leadership - for a
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short time - followed like a dog keeping up with
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its master, as it saw this as the only method to
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maintaining some influence over the workers.
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On May 16th a few thousand students marched to
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Boulogne Billancourt where 35,000 workers were on
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strike. The CGT officials locked the factory
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gates to discourage communication. But workers
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got up on the roof of the factory and shouted
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greetings and discussions took place though the
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iron railings. Solidarity was there and it could
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not be suppressed by a few chains and locked
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gates.
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Industrial Normandy, Paris and Lyons closed down
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virtually on mass. On May 18th coal production
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stopped and public transport in Paris halted. The
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National Railways were next to go out on strike.
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Gas and electricity workers took over control of
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their workplaces but continued domestic supplies.
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Red flags hung from shipyards at St Nazaire which
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employed 10,000 workers. The weekend of the 19th
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of May saw two million people on strike and 122
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factories were reported to be occupied.
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STRIKE WAVE SWEEPS FRANCE
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Money withdrawals from banks were limited to 500
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francs as the possibility of a Bank Of France
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strike panicked people. Petrol supplies soon
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dried up as drivers stocked up. By Monday the
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20th no cross-channel ferries were in operation
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and tourists queued for buses or evacuation
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coaches to Brussels, Geneva, and Barcelona.
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The Citroen factory which employed a lot of
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immigrant labour from Portugal, North Africa and
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Yugoslavia was still in operation. On the May
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20th as the morning shift headed into work at 6am
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they were greeted with the sight of a student
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picket. As the young foreign workers were
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puzzling over the students' leaflets and whether
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or not to go into work along came a march of
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colleagues from a nearby factory. Citroen was on
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strike.
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The textile industry and big department stores of
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Paris joined the snowballing general strike on
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Tuesday 21st. The air traffic controllers in Orly
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and French television (ORTF) had already voted to
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come out the previous Friday.
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On the 20th of May ORTF staff issued the following
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demands;
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1. Forty Hour Week
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2. Lower Retirement Age.
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3. Abrogation of the anti-strike laws of 1963.
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4. Minimum wage of 1000 francs a week.
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5. Repeal of the government's involvement in the
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television station.
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Teachers were on strike as of the 22nd, although
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many attended school in order to keep in contact
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with school students as the unions had requested.
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NOW IS NOT A GOOD TIME TO DIE
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Within a fortnight of the general strike being
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called, more than nine million workers were out on
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strike. As one person put it "On Wednesday the
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undertakers went on strike. Now is not a good
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time to die."
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Workers displayed a great ability to lead by
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example. The gas and electricity workers joined
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the strike but maintained supplies apart from a
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few brief power cuts. Food supplies reached Paris
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as normal after initial disruptions. The postal
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workers agreed to deliver urgent telegrams.
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Print workers said they did not wish to leave a
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monopoly of media coverage to TV and radio and
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agreed to print newspapers as long as the press
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"carries out with objectivity the role of
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providing information which is its duty". In
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some cases print-workers insisted on changes in
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headlines or articles before they would print the
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paper. This happened mostly with the right wing
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papers such as 'Le Figaro' or 'La Nation'.
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In some factories workers continued or altered
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production to suit their needs. In the CSF
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factory in Brest the workers produced walkie-
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talkies which they considered important to both
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strikers and demonstrators alike. At the Wonder
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Batteries factory in Saint-Ouen the strike
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committee disapproved of the reformist line of the
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CGT and decided to barricade themselves in rather
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than talk to the union officials.
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A WORKERS' CITY
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In Nantes, the whole movement and events of 1968
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were to reach a pinnacle. For a week in May the
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city and it's surrounding area was controlled by
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the workers, themselves. The old guardians of
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power and authority looked on helplessly as
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workers took control of their own lives and city.
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On May 24th road blocks were set up around the
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city as farmers made a protest of solidarity with
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the workers and students.
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The transport workers took over the road blocks
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and they controlled all incoming traffic. Petrol
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supplies were controlled, with no petrol tankers
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being allowed into the city without the workers'
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permission. The only functioning petrol pump was
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reserved for use by doctors. By circumventing the
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middle man, the workers and farmers made it
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possible to reduce the cost of food. Milk was now
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50 centimes as opposed to 80 previously. Potatoes
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dropped 48 centimes per kilo in price.
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To make sure these price cuts were passed on,
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shops had to display stickers provided by the
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strike committee saying "This shop is authorised
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to open. Its prices are under permanent
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supervision by the unions". Teachers and students
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organised nurseries so that strikers' children
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were cared for while the schools were closed.
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Women played a very active role in Nantes
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organising, not only as strikers but also playing
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a vital role in committees dealing with food
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supplies.
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This all too brief week in Nantes is a prime
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example of the working class seizing control of an
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area and running it in a socialist manner, even in
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such difficult circumstances. We can see that the
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society created in many ways was an improvement on
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the one Nantes unfortunately slipped back into
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after the events of 1968.
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PACIFY AND DISSIPATE
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De Gaulle, now fearing for the survival of his
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government and slowly looking at his power
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disappear, addressed the country on television on
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May 24th. He spoke of "a more extensive
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participation of everyone in the conduct and the
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result of the activities which directly concern
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|
them." De Gaulle asked the people through a
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referendum as a "mandate for renewal and
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adaption".
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On the same day the March 22nd Movement organised
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a demonstration. 30,000 marched towards the
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Palace de la Bastille. The police had the
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|
Ministries protected, using the usual devices of
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tear gas and batons, but the Bourse (Stock
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|
Exchange) was left unprotected. This was the time
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|
to act and a number of demonstrators armed with
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axe handles, wooden clubs and iron bars went and
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set fire to it.
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It was at this stage that some left wing groups
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lost their nerve. The Trotskyist JCR turned
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|
people back into the Latin Quarter. Other groups
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such as UNEF and Parti Socialiste Unife (United
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|
Socialist Party) blocked the taking of the
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|
Ministries of Finance and Justice. Cohn-Bendit
|
|
said of this incident "As for us, [March 22
|
|
Movement] we failed to realize how easy it would
|
|
have been to sweep all these nobodies away....It
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|
is now clear that if, on 25 May, Paris had woken
|
|
to find the most important Ministries occupied,
|
|
Gaullism would have caved in at once....". Cohn-
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|
Bendit was forced into exile later that very
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|
night.
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|
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The students of the March 22nd Movement would not
|
|
have caused the collapse of Gaullism with this
|
|
occupation, but it would have raised the
|
|
consciousness of many of the young militant
|
|
workers who were inspired by the fighting spirit
|
|
shown by the students. The students' struggle,
|
|
although confused, and encompassing many varying
|
|
ideologies, had been an inspiration. The dynamite
|
|
was there and the student uprising was the fuse
|
|
paper.
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TO THE MINISTRIES
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|
The occupation of the Ministries would have been
|
|
one step further along the line towards a social
|
|
revolution. Of the 12 million workers now on
|
|
strike only 3 million were previousely involved in
|
|
trade unions. The general strike which had
|
|
paralysed the country saw workers' demands far
|
|
surpass those issued by the union leaders.
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|
Expectations had been raised by the wave of
|
|
agitation that was sweeping across the land.
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|
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|
The occupations of the Ministries could have
|
|
brought an awareness to people that what could be
|
|
won here was more than economic agreements with
|
|
the bosses. The move would have brought the
|
|
workers closer to the realisation that what was at
|
|
stake here was how the system was run and not just
|
|
how to tinker with its engine. In every uprising
|
|
of the sort we witnessed in 1968 there is a need
|
|
for organised groups to win the battle of ideas
|
|
and to fuse those ideas into action so that people
|
|
are aware of what can be gained, what victories
|
|
are possible.
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|
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|
The student movement, if it had of occupied the
|
|
government buildings, would have taken a step in
|
|
this direction. The workers were inspired by the
|
|
fight of the students on the streets of Paris,
|
|
militant workers would have been inspired by the
|
|
occupations of the Ministries, and a realisation
|
|
could have swept through France that there was
|
|
more to be won than pay rises from the bosses.
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|
FIN
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|
By Monday May 27th the Government had guaranteed
|
|
an increase of 35% in the industrial minimum wage
|
|
and an all round wage increase of 10%. The
|
|
leaders of the CGT organised a march of 500,000
|
|
workers through the streets of Paris two days
|
|
later. Paris was covered in posters calling for a
|
|
'Government of the People'. Unfortunately the
|
|
majority still thought in terms of changing their
|
|
rulers rather than taking control for themselves.
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|
|
|
De Gaulle and his puppets had been so scared by
|
|
the possibility of revolution that he flew to
|
|
military airfield at Saint-Dizier and talked with
|
|
his top Generals, making sure that he could rely
|
|
on them if he needed the army's help to maintain
|
|
his grip on power. On May 30th he once again
|
|
appeared on French television abandoning his plans
|
|
for the referendum and promising elections within
|
|
forty days.
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|
|
|
De Gaulle in typical fashion promised tougher
|
|
measures if, as he put it, "the whole French
|
|
people were gagged or prevented from leading a
|
|
normal existence, by those elements (Reds &
|
|
Anarchists) that are being used to prevent
|
|
students from studying, the workers from
|
|
working....". Following De Gaulle's address the
|
|
CRS were sent to disperse the remaining pickets
|
|
from workplaces.
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|
|
|
By June 5th most of the strikes were over and an
|
|
air of what passes for normality within capitalism
|
|
had swept back over France. Any strikes which
|
|
continued after this date were crushed in a
|
|
military style operation using armoured vehicles
|
|
and guns. In isolation those pockets of militancy
|
|
stood no chance.
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|
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|
SNATCHING DEFEAT FROM THE JAWS OF VICTORY
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|
|
|
All street demonstrations were banned and once
|
|
again the PCF sought respectability by using its
|
|
influence to destroy what was left of the action
|
|
committees. By the end of June the colleges were
|
|
regained and the Red & Black flags were torn down
|
|
from the front of the Sorbonne.
|
|
|
|
In this climate of defeat and demoralisation
|
|
people turned back to the certainties of
|
|
conservatism. In the elections the Gaullists
|
|
captured 60% of the vote. Their grip on the reins
|
|
of power was reinforced.
|
|
|
|
In 1968 you had a system which is replicated in
|
|
most countries in western Europe today. Yet,
|
|
during the events of May that system was in total
|
|
turmoil and De Gaulle had forseen that he might
|
|
have had to use the army to crush the movement of
|
|
people. The streets of France could have flowed
|
|
with blood like they most certainly did in Chile
|
|
five years later.
|
|
|
|
Cohn-Bendit and the March 22nd Movement aspired to
|
|
a classless society based on workers' councils
|
|
where the division of labour between order-givers
|
|
and order-takers disappeared. But obviously this
|
|
vision of a future society was not shared by
|
|
others on the left and the part they played was to
|
|
place more obstacles in the way rather than to
|
|
overcome the ones that already existed.
|
|
|
|
Where the power of the state has been broken down,
|
|
the working class led by example, as in Nantes
|
|
where they showed themselves capable of
|
|
controlling and managing their city. The most
|
|
active strikers were more progressive and far
|
|
sighted than their union leaders. Workers showed
|
|
that there was more to be attained than simple
|
|
demands and inspiringly took that fight to the
|
|
bosses.
|
|
|
|
STALINISTS WANTED TOTAL CONTROL
|
|
|
|
Why did France '68 ultimately fail? There was no
|
|
co-ordination of ideas or tactics when events
|
|
reached a crucial stage. The influential PCF
|
|
believed that their power would increase in the
|
|
elections and so were hostile to all movements
|
|
which were outside of their control. The trade
|
|
union leadership helped pacify the workers by
|
|
restricting the focus of workers to 'bread and
|
|
butter' demands and away from the wider political
|
|
issues.
|
|
|
|
Many people had fine aspirations but not much idea
|
|
of how to achieve those aims. Too many things
|
|
were left to chance and the whole movement seemed
|
|
to stumble on from day to day like a blind man
|
|
desperately trying to find the light of freedom
|
|
that must exist at the end of the tunnel. What
|
|
lessons can we learn from the events of '68. We
|
|
saw a developed capitalist society being brought
|
|
to the edge of revolt, people questioning the
|
|
entire system.
|
|
|
|
The events took place very rapidly as the working
|
|
class, fused by the energy and bravado of the
|
|
students, raised demands that could not be catered
|
|
for within the confines of the existing system.
|
|
The general strike displays with beautiful clarity
|
|
the potential power that lies in the hands of the
|
|
working class. However, the situation needed more
|
|
co-ordination and organisation. The workers
|
|
needed to organise inter-workplace committees, and
|
|
create a mechanism whereby delegates began to deal
|
|
with the real problems.
|
|
|
|
FROM NEGOTIATIONS TO REVOLT
|
|
|
|
The anti-authoritarian left, though very active,
|
|
were too weak among striking workers. The various
|
|
workers on strike could have co-ordinated their
|
|
action in order to push the state backwards.
|
|
France was already in turmoil industrially and the
|
|
government was weakening. Workers' councils and
|
|
real democracy throughout the workplaces could
|
|
have led to stronger negotiations and, eventually,
|
|
outright revolt.
|
|
|
|
Once the factories went into a position of self-
|
|
management the state would be losing the battle.
|
|
Self-management never got onto the agenda, for
|
|
reasons explained above. Shopfloor workers needed
|
|
a mechanism to represent their views and have an
|
|
effective democratic decision making process. The
|
|
union leadership feared and circumvented this.
|
|
But through democratically elected delegates,
|
|
factory committees could have raised demands which
|
|
would be impossible for the state to satisfy. It
|
|
could have posed the question, who should run
|
|
France ? When our chance comes to knock the bosses from
|
|
their pedestal we must grab it with both hands. We must
|
|
destroy and replace the system when it falls into
|
|
a position of weakness, not just for our own sakes
|
|
but for the future of humanity.
|
|
|
|
Dermot Sreenan
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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|
|
|
The Workers Solidarity Movement can be contacted at
|
|
PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland
|
|
|
|
Some of our material is available via the Spunk press electronic archive
|
|
|
|
by FTP to etext.archive.umich.edu or 141.211.164.18
|
|
or by gopher ("gopher etext.archive.umich.edu")
|
|
|
|
in the directory /pub/Politics/Spunk/texts/groups/WSM
|