https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/28/world/europe/france-protests-yellow-vests-paris-commune.html

The Embers of a Long-Smoldering Revolution Are Stoked in France
The 150th anniversary of the Paris Commune of 1871 has struck a chord, reviving 
calls for better political representation and highlighting economic 
inequalities.

By Constant Méheut 
April 28, 2021

Silhouettes created by the artist Dugudus commemorated the 150th anniversary of 
the Paris Commune in front of the Sacré Coeur Basilica in Paris last 
month.Anne-Christine Poujoulat/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
PARIS — On a recent chilly morning, a hundred people flocked to a tiny square 
near the Sacré-Coeur Basilica, at the top of the hill in Montmartre. They were 
not the usual tourists drawn by the breathtaking panoramic views over Paris, 
but left-wing demonstrators celebrating the 150th anniversary of a revolution 
that started right where they stood.

“We’re here, we’re here!” a guitarist sang, playing a tune popularized by the 
Yellow Vest protesters who have in recent years faced off against the 
government of President Emmanuel Macron, as red flags and banners fluttered 
around him.

Mr. Macron, the guitarist sang, was equivalent to his 19th-century predecessor, 
Patrice de Mac Mahon, who crushed the revolution they had come to commemorate, 
the Paris Commune of 1871 — a cataclysm that still consumes many on the French 
far left.

“All the just causes of today were initiated by the Commune, by our 
forefathers,” said Frédéric Jamet, 61, who proudly described himself as a 
“Yellow Vest veteran.” Around him were other protesters wearing yellow vests, 
communist militants wrapped in red scarves and a handful of amused students and 
curious retirees.

For decades, the memory of the Paris Commune, a short-lived revolution that 
shook Paris from March to May 1871 before being suppressed by the French Army, 
had faded in the country’s national history, left out of school curriculums and 
kept alive mainly by communist militants.

But as France has been rocked by a series of social movements in recent years, 
the story of the Paris Commune has made a comeback, with protesters making 
connections between today’s struggles and those of a century and a half ago. 
“The Commune” has inspired calls for greater political representation for 
people across France, been used to highlight contemporary economic inequalities 
and even emerged as a reference for some feminist activists.

Dozens of commemorations of the revolution’s 150th anniversary have been 
organized since mid-March — they will continue until late May — revealing the 
old beating heart of revolutionary Paris, with debates raging in newspaper 
columns and at City Hall over the legacy of an event marked by violence.


Soldiers at a barricade in Paris in 1871. Thousands of insurgents were killed 
in an uprising that in recent decades had largely faded from memory.Roger 
Viollet Collection, via Getty Images
“Over the past five years, this memory has totally warmed up,” said Quentin 
Deluermoz, a historian of the Commune. “It is a historical event that backs up 
new grass-roots demands in terms of reclaiming social, political and economic 
power.”

The Commune was born on March 18, 1871, when working-class Parisians rejected a 
humiliating peace treaty following France’s defeat by Germany in the 
Franco-Prussian War of 1870 and rebelled against the central government. They 
established their own socialist municipal government, or “commune,” in the 
capital and enacted progressive policies that would inspire much of the 
country’s legislation in the following decades.

The separation of church and state was enforced, while schooling became 
compulsory, free and secular. Day-care centers were placed near city factories, 
labor unions were created by the dozen and night work for bakers was banned. 
Participatory democracy and parity in pay were encouraged.

After only 72 days, the Commune was besieged and then suppressed by the French 
Army, with brutal acts of violence on both sides. At least 7,000 insurgents 
were killed by army soldiers during the “bloody week,” while Commune fighters 
executed dozens of hostages and set fire to several historic buildings.

But it is perhaps the tragic and ephemeral nature of the Commune that has most 
fueled the fascination with this revolution today, its existence too brief to 
have led to disillusionment.

Mr. Deluermoz said that because the Commune involved so many different elements 
of revolutionary movements, it had fueled a wide variety of analyses.

A Yellow Vest protest in Paris in December 2018. Supporters of the movement 
have invoked the memory of the Paris Commune during their protests.Abdulmonam 
Eassa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
The Commune was long invoked as a model of class warfare — Marx and Lenin saw 
it as the harbinger of working-class revolutions — until its memory began to 
fade in the 1980s, along with communist ideology.

Demonstrators during the Nuit Debout protests in 2016, a French version of the 
Occupy movement, renamed the Place de la République in Paris as the Place de la 
Commune. Yellow Vest protesters in 2018 chanted slogans like “1871 reasons to 
believe.” 

“The problem is that we are experiencing things, injustices again, that’s 
what’s awakening the spirit of the Commune,” said Sophie Cloarec, pointing to 
the new economic insecurity and exploitation engendered by the gig economy.

Ms. Cloarec, on a recent Saturday afternoon, was participating in a feminist 
march honoring women who played a major role in the 1871 revolution. Around 
her, groups of women were papering walls with posters of famous female Commune 
fighters, such as the teacher Louise Michel or Victorine Brocher, who kept a 
canteen during the siege of Paris.

It was the latest sign of the revolution’s enduring resonance, as feminist 
groups are emerging as a powerful force in France against the backdrop of a 
delayed #MeToo movement.

Mathilde Larrère, a historian of 19th-century French revolutions, said the 
Commune “was a feminist movement because women embraced it” to obtain new 
rights like better access to education and pensions for unmarried widows.

Jean-Pierre Theurier, a member of the Association of the Friends of the 
Commune, said he had been surprised by the renewed public interest in the 
revolution. He said more people were attending the walking tours he organizes 
in the Père Lachaise cemetery, where a bloody battle took place between the 
graves and where some 150 Commune fighters were executed; bullet holes are 
still visible on some walls.

“There’s a return of the repressed,” Ms. Theurier said, referring to the 
decades-long omission of the Commune from textbooks and official discourse.

Rue de Rivoli in Paris after the French Army suppressed the revolutionaries in 
1871.Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis, via Getty Images
But in a country where historical anniversaries are often more divisive than 
unifying, and where revolutions are often a point of national pride, the 
Commune’s “return” has also revived old ideological quarrels over its legacy.

The fighting began at Paris City Hall in February, when conservative city 
councilors accused the left-wing majority of exploiting the anniversary to 
political ends while ignoring the Commune’s own acts of violence and 
destruction. Historians and politicians then clashed over the need to 
commemorate the event, and the French press took sides.

But perhaps the fiercest attack came from the least expected side: the left.

On a chilly March morning, City Hall officials organized the first 
commemorative event, gathering about 50 Parisians at the foot of the Montmartre 
hill to carry life-size silhouettes of famous Commune fighters. Anger roared 
above them, in the tiny square near the Sacré-Coeur Basilica, where left-wing 
demonstrators had organized their own event, boycotting the official 
celebration.

“You Versaillais!” a man shouted to the crowd down the hill, using the name 
given to people living in Versailles, the city where the central government 
regrouped during the Commune, and the home to French kings until the French 
Revolution of 1789.

“Those down there, they’re the privileged few,” said Mr. Jamet, the Yellow Vest 
veteran.

Standing a few feet away, Catherine Krcmar, a 70-year-old seasoned leftist 
activist, smiled as she watched the protest around her. “Revolutionary Paris is 
not dead,” she said.


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