134 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
134 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
Free Radio in France
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RADIO LIBERTAIRE
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It was the 1981 congress of the French Anarchist
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Federation which signed the deeds which set Radio
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Libertaire on the road.. After long and heated debate the
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congress accepted, unanimously, the idea of launching a
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radio station which would be the voice for the FAF. At that
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time it had no name, no wavelength, no real goal, no
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presenters and for its launch a budget of (wait for it)
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15000F (=A3150)! No member of congress, at that moment
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could have predicted the events which weree about to
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unfold other than that by the autumn anarchy would once
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again be on the airwaves. As in 1921, when the insurgents
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in Kronstadt sent out radio messages; as in 1936 with Radio
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CNT-FAI in Spain, or again the participation of anarchists
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in the Free Radio movement at the end of the 70s, with, in
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particular, Radio Trottoir (Toulon) and Radio-Alarme
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whose producers were members of the FAF.
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It was on the 1st September 1981 (1) in a damp cellar on the
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slopes of Montmartre that the radiophonic adventure began.
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And in a very rudimentary fashion, in conditions that defied
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the laws of broadcasting: a studio measuring 12 m2, with an
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assortment of recuperated material and a mini-team of 6.
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The first calls came in from our listeners, the first listeners
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cards went out... and the jamming began!
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Meanwhile old hands of the Free Radio movement were
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putting together some very credible studios in order to go
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for a slice of the cake represented by the FM band. The
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spirit of the Free Radios was already beginning to agonise,
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victims of the financial appetite of some of those who had
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run the pirate stations. In August 1983 the socialists put an
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end to 'the anarchy on the waves' by siezing a number of
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transmitters including that of RL. On the 28th August at
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5.45am the CRS appeared at the doors of RL. They broke
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down the door and siezed all the equipment. The presenters
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were beaten up and arrested, the antenna cable and pylon
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were cut up into pieces. Neither the reinforced door, nor the
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numerous listeners who were present, were able to prevent
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our radio being siezed. The socialists, then in power with
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their chums in the French Communist Party, had not
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however reckoned with our determination and even less
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with the solidarity which was shown to us by thousands of
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listeners during the following two years. Two years during
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which, day after day, links of friendship between RL and its
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listeners were progressively strengthened. The reaction was
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immediate. And Impressive. The most important part
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translated itself on 3rd September 1983 into a
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demonstration of 5000 and RL back on the waves.
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Moments of warmth and intensity were so many and the
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happenings so frequent that one article cannot do them
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justice (2): galas, jamming by the 'Cop-Radios', scuffles with
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the authorities, the obtaining of legal dispensation - the
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demonstrations... by enumerating these events we are
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setting down the essentials of the history of RL. However,
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in reality the most important can hardly be reported. This
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was the daily and collective history of RL, which all of us,
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listeners and producers, hold a part of. It's a history of tens
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of thousands of hours of transmission, telephone calls which
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brought with it letters, exchanges and meetings. Radio
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Libertaire was born with the passage of time. Everyone laid
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their own stone with their voice, their expertise, their ability
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or their energy. RL is also the listener who brought in a
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microphone ('You should be able to find some use for it');
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that other one who left their visiting card ('I'm an
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electrician, if you need anything...') and the pensioner ('I'm
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ill, and my pension isn't much... but come round for a bite
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some day'), and the non-sighted person who, thanks to the
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mutual aid small ads, managed to go off to the countryside
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on a tandem with a young girl... and brought flowers back to
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the radio station; it's all the letters that came in to 145, rue
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Amelot to help, ask a question, encourage, suggest, inform,
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criticise. It was when a zine, an association, an individual, a
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union, the FAF had something to say, the telephone calls,
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the meetings, the networks.
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The stations cultural identity also came with time. The first
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producers brought their own records into the studio and
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introduced thousands to music by artists such as
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Debronckart, Fanon, Servat, Gribouille, Jonas, Utg=E9-Royo,
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Aurenche, Capart and many others. In 1982 another kind of
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music arrived naturally on the airwaves, another music that
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they were listening to in the squats, on the edges of the
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system: Alternative Rock. Then other styles found their
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place: jazz, blues, folk, industrial music, rap, reggae. And
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other artists found the radio station open to other formms of
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expression: cartoons, the plastic arts, theatre, literature,
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cinema...
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Though the radio of the FAF, RL nevertheless opened its
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doors from the beginning to its friends: anarcho-syndicalists
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from the CNT and other unions, Libre Pens=E9e, the Pacifist
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Union, the Hopeful Ones, the League of the Rights of Man.
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And it was there in this daily reality, in the struggles and the
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meetings that forged itself, quite spontaneously, the links
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between RL and the social movement: strikers, the
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unemployed, shelterless, squatters, antiracists, ecologists,
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conscientious objectors, refugees, ex-prisonners... Surviving
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crises and the daily workload RL rose to the demands of the
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times. It supported the student movement in 1986, and
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became the radio of the street report movement, round table
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discussion groups, an open station to report police brutality,
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permanent agit-pop. When war broke out in the Gulf RL
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was at the front announcing, hour by hour, demos,
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meetings, regional committees whilst allowing for debates
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and analysis. Just as naturally it was during these times of
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crisis that RL really discovered its dimension as a 'radio for
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struggle'. RL is also a thousand reasons for listeners to be
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annoyed, rage and protest against the technical
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imperfections or those aspects that were judged
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incongruous, provocative, too reformist or too radical. But it
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was above all, we hope, an opportunity to discover the
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pleasures of debate, struggle and libertarian ideas. Shouting
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matches... cries from the heart... all was there and all was
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welcome! In a world of the market, the spectacle and
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dehumanisation where triumphant capitalism crushes both
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man and woman where thought, in the image of the
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economy is uniform and globalised, RL, with its strenghths
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and its weaknesses, its faults and its qualities does it not
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seem to be simply human... quite simply human?
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LAURENT FOUILLARD
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(1) At the time RL was transmitting from 6pm to 10pm on
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89.6Mhz
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(2) See Radio Libertaire, la voix sans ma=EEtre by Yves
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Peyraut published by Monde Libertaire (50F). Obtainable
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from the Monde Libertaire bookshop.
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