Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Hate heaped on black heroines of the French Resistance would look familiar to AOC and Rashida Tlaib


Author:Annette Joseph-Gabriel
(MENAFN- The Conversation) Women of color who hold public office in Europe and the United States frequently attract intense scrutiny.

In the United States, the outspoken U.S. representativesAlexandria Ocasio Cortez ,Rashida TlaibandIlhan Omarhave seen frequent attacks in the media bycriticswho portray them as unpatriotic, not American enough.


Government ministers across the Atlantic have been subjected to similar aggression.


Both former French Minister of JusticeChristiane Taubira , the first black woman tohold this high office , and European Parliament member Cécile Kyenge – Italy's first black government minister – have been satirized withoffensive images , called racist names and told, in short, that theydon't belong in European politics .


My historicalresearch on race and gendershows that such attacks started well before the current era. In France, even black women who fought Nazis during World War II were accused of not being French enough when, later, they entered politics.


Redefining patriotism

Black French women played important and often overlooked roles in the French Resistance, theunderground movementthat fought Hitler's regime after France surrendered to Nazi Germany in 1940. They served as spies, nurses and clandestine couriers.


My forthcoming book uncovers the political struggles of France's first two black female senators, Eugénie Éboué-Tell and Jane Vialle, after they took their fight for equality into government.




Eugenie Éboué-Tell.
French Senate


Eugénie Éboué-Tell was theFrench Guyana -born wife of a high-ranking colonial administrator in Africa. In 1939, Éboué-Tell joined the women's auxiliary corps as a nurse in Central Africa's fledgling Resistance army.


Given her husband's prominence, Éboué-Tell's military service brought visibility to the African origins of the French Resistance movement – and to her own dissidence. In 1940, Éboué-Tell was sentenced to death in absentia for joining the Resistance by France's Vichy government, which wasby then collaborating with the Nazis .


After the Allied victory, Éboué-Tell went from death sentence to being awarded the Frenchmedal of honorby the government.


In 1945 she was elected to the French National Assembly and a year later to the Senate. There she met another black woman who had also played an important role in the French Resistance,Jane Vialle .


Challenging French oppression from within

Vialle, born in 1906 in the Republic of the Congo, moved to Paris with her father at the age of seven. She was working as a journalist when World War II broke out.




Jane Vialle, a reporter turned spy turned French senator.
French Senate


Vialle left Paris and became a clandestine agent forCombat , one of the three major Resistance movements in the south of France. As a spy, Vialle gathered intelligence on the movement of Nazi troops across Europe.


She was arrested in January 1943 and charged with treason. In her trial records, the Vichy French prosecutor said that Vialle had so expertly coded her data that, when her house was raided, police could not crack her code.


Vialle was sent to a concentration camp and, then, awomen's prison in Marseille . The historical records I located differ on how she survived incarceration: Either she escaped or she was released.


Much of black women's history during World War II is similarly ambiguous. Their stories of resistance remain untold, still shrouded in mystery.


Either way, Vialle survived the war. She was elected to the French Senate in 1947.


Continuing the resistance after World War II

Following electoral campaigns that emphasized their role in the Resistance, Éboué-Tell and Vialle were initially hailed in France as war heroes.


They used the power of their new Senate seats to challenge another kind of oppression in France: colonialism.


In 1947 France was still a global empire. It controlled dozens of colonies and territories in the Caribbean, South America and across Africa.


France's deployment of troops to its African colonies during World War II caused a rise in the number of children born of African mothers and white French soldiers. As scholarsEmmanuelle SaadaandOwen Whitehave documented, French colonial policy was to sequester these children in government orphanages, where they received a limited education and could be forced into child labor.


Vialle and Éboué-Tell thought these children, too, deserved liberation.


In 1947, they collaborated on legislation that would give these children the same rights as those born in mainland France. Among other benefits, it would allow them to conduct a paternity search and could require absentee French fathers to pay child support.


Fellow lawmakers accused Vialle and Éboué-Tell of being divisive for highlighting racial inequality. But after a fierce four-year battle, the landmark legislation passed.


Learning from history

I find in Éboué-Tell's and Vialle's stories relevant parallels to politics today.


These black French women knew from deeply personal experience that their country was both heroic and villainous, a place of freedom and atrocity – at once a symbol of liberation from Nazism and a colonial oppressor.


As outsiders who'd worked their way into the center of power, they broadened narrow ideas of who was authentically 'French.' They expanded more citizenship rights to people who, like them, came from the colonies.


I can see today's female politicians of color following their lead, using their political power to advocate for the most marginalized in society.


As a member of parliament, France's Christiane Taubira spearheaded 2001 legislation that recognized the Atlantic slave trade as a crime against humanity. In 2016, sheresignedas Minister of Justice in opposition to new anti-terror laws targeting French citizens of immigrant origin.


Now another black French woman, National Assembly member Danièle Obono, is pushing legislation toprotect children and working mothers .


U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez hasdone the same in the United States . Ilhan Omar has signed onto theDignity for Detained Immigrants bill , which would better protect immigrants detained by the Department of Homeland Security.


And, like French pioneers Éboué-Tell and Vialle, these 'outsider' politicians are stillworking togetherto effect change from within the government.



    Women

    World War II

    Muslim women

    Women in politics

    French empire

    Female soldiers

    French colonies

    Female leaders

    black women



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