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A century and a half on; Commemoration begins of the bloody weeks of the Paris Commune

One can trace the long-term causes behind the Commune to the Revolution of 1789. France had gone through a series of revolutions, 1789, 1830, 1848, and each one had emerged from a big push from the left and had ended up – with Napoleon, with King Louis-Philippe and then with Napoleon III. Revolutionary sentiment had gestated during that time in Paris.
Exactly 150 years after the Paris Commune, rival passions are flaring again over how to remember the city’s brief and much-romanticized experiment in power to the people.

The 1871 Paris Commune, an uprising against a conservative government by working-class Parisians that was brutally crushed after 72 days, is one of the lesser-known chapters in French history.

But its memory still looms large in left-wing rebellions worldwide and in Paris with the towering Sacre-Coeur basilica in Montmartre, built by the victors on the ruins of the crushed Commune.

The revolt erupted after the Franco-Prussian war and ended in a bloodbath, with government troops massacring between 6,000 to 20,000 people during la Semaine sanglante (bloody week) that ended the Parisians’ brief flirtation with self-rule.

Last week, Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo inaugurated a program of 50 events commemorating the Commune, including exhibitions, plays, conferences, and debates.

But with public sympathies still divided been the “Communards” and the “Versailles” government, trying to rally Parisians around a shared reading of what Karl Marx described as “France’s civil war” is proving difficult.

An explanatory video about the Commune tweeted by Paris City Hall noted that both the government and the Communards, who killed about 100 hostages in the dying days of the standoff, had blood on their hands.

But the administration of Hidalgo, a Socialist, was nonetheless accused of bias for emphasizing the egalitarian ideals of the Commune.

On Twitter users reacted by praising Adolphe Thiers, the leader who quashed the Commune, as a “national hero”.

But for another reader, he was “a traitor and a murderer” who if alive today would be hauled before the International Criminal Court.   

The subject also prompted an acrimonious debate last month at the City Hall, with the right accusing the left of glorifying what councilor Antoine Beauquier called “a sad time…in which Parisians killed other Parisians”.

For the historian Mathilde Larrere, the row showed how the memory of the Commune remains deeply divisive.

“It was as if we were back in 1871,” she said.

The Commune began on March 18, 1871, when Thiers, whose government had a strong royalist faction, sent troops to remove cannons on the hill of Montmartre that had been used to defend the city during a four-month Prussian siege.

Anti-monarchist Parisians rushed to repel the troops, sparking clashes that resulted in the deaths of two generals and prompting the government to flee to Versailles, the former seat of French kings.

Six days later the insurgents won municipal elections in Paris and set up a system of self-government that was hailed by Marx and Lenin as a model for a proletarian revolution.

Some elements of the Commune’s manifesto are seen as being extraordinarily progressive for the time.

“Many of the values that we hold dear today underpinned those of the Commune,” said Laurence Patrice, the Communist councilor in charge of the commemorations at the City of Paris, pointing to measures such as equal pay for men and women, free schooling, and the naturalization of foreigners.

But for many in 19th-century France, the Communards were outlaws who burnt down key monuments, including Paris City Hall, and were fiercely anti-clerical.

Religious teaching was banned and priests were killed, including the archbishop of Paris, who was taken hostage and murdered in the dying days of the Commune.

“Presenting the Commune as an idyllic period is a lie, it was an extremely bloody period, on both sides,” Beauquier, a conservative city councilor, told AFP.

There are no goodies on one side and baddies on the other.”

He and other right-wing lawmakers accuse Hidalgo, who is mulling a run for the French presidency next year, of using the memory of the Commune to try to unite a fractured left.

For Larrere, an expert on 19th-century history, where the Commune was truly revolutionary was in the proportion of lawmakers that were drawn from the working classes.

“Never in French history were there so many workers in a representative assembly,” she told AFP.

Beyond the political arena, the much-mythologized Communards continue to inspire, as seen during the “Yellow Vest” protest movement of 2018 and 2019.

Among their demands was the right for citizens to propose laws or dismiss elected representatives a form of participatory democracy that was in discussion during the Commune.

For Pierre Vesperini, a historian writing in Philosophie magazine, the yellow vests were the “direct descendants of the Parisians of 1871”.

“Then as now, we’re dealing with an uprising of misery — we want to live in dignity — and of political ethics we want more democracy,” he wrote.

By Sanjida Jannat

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