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Title: Insulting the flag
Author: André Prudhommeaux
Date: 1938
Language: en
Topics: France, popular front, nationalism, patriotism, fascism, refugees, spanish revolution
Source: From Un anarchisme hors norme (a collection of texts by André Prudhommeaux, published by Tumult. Retrieved December 1, 2020 from https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/n2z4tc
Notes: English translation in Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library No. 102, September 2020. Translated by: Paul Sharkey. https://tumult.noblogs.org/post/2020/02/15/un-anarchisme-hors-norme-andre-prudhommeaux/

André Prudhommeaux

Insulting the flag

The most fulsome possible insult to the tricolour flag has just been

hurled at it by the neo-patriots.

The Daladier[1] government has just cast itself in the role of flunkey

to Mussolini and Hitler and the French Cagoulards[2] by launching an

across-the-board embargo on foreign anti-fascists.

The National Popular Front or Popular National Front chamber has put its

signature to this disgraceful measure, a trespass against democracy, a

silly chauvinism and cravenness on the part of this nation.

The range of political parties, personalities and agencies of the Left

has made itself complicit in this infamy: without the slightest whimper

of protest.

Ultimately, the country as a whole has indicated that it is okay with

penal servitude, okay with butchery, okay with the most abject of Sacred

Unions, that of stupidity and slavishness.

The entire nobility of a people can be summed up by its stance vis a vis

those not part of the nation.

Now, by order of Monsieur Albert Sarraut, known as “The Sphinx,” there

are to be two very well-defined classes of “guests of France”; the

well-to-do, protected ones, including the spies and agents provocateurs

of foreign powers, such as the likes of Troncoso, Tamburini and Co.[3],

the S.A. from the Brown House in Paris, the henchmen of the fasci, the

informers of the GPU and Gestapo, in short, all of those one associates

with money, idleness, papers in perfect order (be they genuine or

phoney) and adherence to the police-national-capitalist game. And then

there are the others...

The others: that means the outlawed, the persecuted, the courageous free

men who had fled from the abjection of dictatorial rulers. It means the

workers lured to France by French capitalists and who have

well-meaningly agreed to rent their brawn to it, without quite agreeing

to sell it their souls too. It means all those foreign proletarians or

colonials who have retained their independence vis a vis the informers

of such as Chiappe,[4] Sarraut or Doriot[5] — and stayed honest when

faced with the thugs from the Consulates, Mussolini’s dopolavoro[6]

schemes and the yellow unions — and retained their integrity by steering

clear of Carbone’s gangs[7] and the gangs of Sidilarite Francaise.[8]

Meaning, ultimately, all the Spanish republican refugees that have been

stalked (by bombs most fascist, Nazi flame-throwers, blackshirt

bayonets, the cut-throats of the Tercio[9] and Moorish mercenaries, by

shells blessed by the Pope and, sometimes, even by the revolvers of the

stalinist Cheka) all the way to the oh-so- hospitable and oh-so-liberal

land of French democracy.

These are in good standing. All set-asides of expulsion orders are to be

reviewed and all files re-examined! There is to be no renewal of

residence permits for those who had managed thus far to evade civil

service whims! Draconian punishment (minimum of one year in prison) for

any breach of the foreigners’ statute! Draconian prison terms and fines

for any French citizen who may have welcomed, hosted, harboured under

his roof a foreigner whose identity card is not up to date! Men hunted

through the streets, in furnished rooms, in public places, in workshops

and homes. Rewards posted for information given, for unspeakable

revenge, for anonymous informants. Police attention unleashed against

all who have dared think that France was somewhere that they might yet

have the right, even though starving to death, to think for themselves

and walk along with head held high, without being subjected to marching

in step and political, trade union and religious dragooning into the

ranks of totalitarian fascism.

This climate of provocation and unbridled tittle-tattle, this fascism

which they had been seeking to flee from, is orchestrated by France

against these people first and even against her own liberalism-guilty

citizens.

The policy of the Popular Front and communists, the bloc stretching from

Thorez[10] to Marin,[11] proceeds to cries of “France for the French!”

It is to cries of “France for the French!” that machine-guns will be

installed tomorrow along the Pyrenean border, not so that they can be

trained on fascist or swastika-daubed planes coming to bomb Cerbere or

Bourg-Madame, but to strafe the huddled working class masses stalked by

Franco’s murderers and to deny refugees seeking asylum across the French

border, which will be open solely to the disciples of Gil Robles[12] and

Juan March,[13] but must remain hermetically sealed against these

“undesirables.”

In the face of such a disgrace, without precedent in the history of any

people, our reckoning is that every French person whose bond with the

land of their birth is not made up exclusively of sordid jealousy and

greed, is duty-bound to consider themselves a foreigner in their own

country. And have no option but to deny a Homeland which is brazenly

embracing a world that is a hideous confraternity of profiteers,

informers and assassins, a land bereft of righteousness, ideals or

honour.

The blood of natives, slaughtered in their thousands by the French

government in Violette’s Indochina and in North America; the blood of

Spaniards turned away under aerial bombardment or handed over to the

firing squads of the rebel army; the blood of the Italians and Germans

delivered up to their fascist executioners; the blood of those we have

described as “our friends and our guests” and which is holy in the eyes

of every god-given and man-made law; that blood is on the head of the

French nation.

That blood is and shall remain upon your head, all of you who support

the parties (whether these purport to be “nationalist” or

“internationalist”) which have, by their silence or their votes,

countenanced, allowed, authorized, encouraged the recent ignominy of the

Daladier government.

The shame that falls upon all who go by the description “French,” when

that tag is synonymous with so much squalor, money-grubbing and

penny-pinching, when, say, they turn back to certain death and despair

all of the asylum-seeking populace of Spain, just to make a 50-billion

franc saving!

When German racism seeks to exclude from Germany those of different

stock, it may come as an affront to one’s humanitarian feelings; yet it

operates on the basis of a political complex of ideas and enthusiasms.

But for France which — so they say — “covers with her flag” a majority

of colonized peoples (whose lands she has ravaged) and foreigners (whose

labour she exploits) to have behaved the way she has towards the

“native” and “foreign” workers on her “soil” is an overwhelming

indication once and for all just what a sordid and filthy rag the flag

of Monsieur Jean Zay[14] and the French Republic is.

A.P. In Terre libre (Nîmes) No 52, 6 May 1938

[1] Edouard Daladier, French politician: one of the ‘fathers’ of the

Popular Front.

[2] The Cagoule was the nickname of the clandestine, far right,

pro-fascist CSAR (Secret Revolutionary Action Committee) Cagoulard was

the name given to its members/supporters.

[3] Julian Troncoso was the leading Francoist spy involved in operations

against Spanish republican interests on French soil. Tamburini (passing

for an “anarchist”) was involved with Locuty and Fiomberti — in a double

bombing in Paris in 1937 designed to bring a crackdown on communists and

anarchists. On capture, he admitted having worked for Rome, Salamanca

and Berlin.

[4] Jean Chiappe, French civil servant, police prefect and politician

involved with the far right.

[5] Jacques Doriot, one-time leader of the Communist Youth and a

communist party prefect who moved to the right and launched the PPF

(French People’s Party) in 1936, before becoming an open associate of

the Third Reich and fighting on the Eastern Front alongside the Germans

in WW2.

[6] The dopolavoro (after-work) schemes were the cultural front of the

Italian fascist movement.

[7] Carbone was a Corsican gangster, pimp and drug pusher, involved in

political bossism and strike-breaking in Marseilles and partnered with

Chiappe (above) in prostitution in Montmartre.

[8] A mocking reference to Solidarité Française, a far right activist

group founded by Major Jean Renaud.

[9] The Spanish Foreign Legion, notoriously pro-fascist.

[10] Maurice Thorez, prominent French Communist Party leader.

[11] Louis Marin, French politician who held a number of cabinet

portfolios in the 1930s.

[12] Leader of the right-wing CEDA party in Spain.

[13] Notorious Spanish smuggler and financier who was a major backer of

the July 1936 coup attempt in Spain.

[14] Jean Zay, French minister of Education, 1936–1939.