A Multiracial Society
Paris, France — Few people realize that France has become a
multiracial society, largely due to its African, Caribbean and Asian
colonial past. But other European, North and South American countries
also contribute to the French "melting pot", and African Americans have
played a significant role in its development.
African
Americans have lived and worked in Paris since the 1800s. An early
success story is that of Victor Séjour, a New Orleans resident who
became renown as a playwright and whose work was remarkably popular for
most of his career. He lived in Paris for 28 years, and was buried in
Pere Lachaise cemetery upon his death in 1874.
Paris saw
the beginnings of an African American community in the aftermath of
World War I. Many black GIs decided to stay in France after having been
well received by the French, and others followed them. The mythical
"color-blind" society of Paris beckoned – it was viewed as a welcome
solace after the heavy burden of racism that permeated every aspect of
African American existence in the United States.
It was
during this time – the annees folles or "crazy years" – that jazz was
introduced to the French and the Parisian love affair with black
culture was born. Black musicians, artists and Harlem Renaissance
writers found 1920s Paris ready to embrace them with open arms.
Montmartre became the center of the small community, with jazz clubs
such as Le Grand Duc, Chez Florence and Bricktop’s thriving in this
welcoming atmosphere.
Langston Hughes’ first experience
in Paris revolved around this lively area, where he served as a busboy
at Le Grand Duc. Blacks opened restaurants and other businesses in the
neighborhood as well. Though artists such a Henry O. Tanner and Augusta
Savage tended to establish themselves on the Left Bank, the majority of
activity in the African American community occurred in Montmartre.
The
ultimate example of African American success in Paris was that of the
career of Josephine Baker. Opening at the Theatre des Champs Elysees in
1925, Ms. Baker took the town by storm with her Danse Sauvage (Savage
Dance). She would adopt France as her home, going undercover for the
Resistance during World War II, starting her Rainbow Tribe in the
French countryside and dying in the French capital 50 years after she
was catapulted to fame and fortune. She was honored with a state
funeral, and as many as 20,000 people crowded around La Madeleine
church to say their final farewells to this remarkable woman.
World
War II brought all the fanfare to an abrupt halt. The Nazi invasion of
Paris in June 1940 meant suppression of the "corrupt" influence of jazz
in the French capital and danger of imprisonment for African Americans
choosing to remain in the city. Most Americans, black as well as white,
left Paris at this time.
African American pianist Arthur
Briggs refused to leave, and was confined in an interment camp just
north of Paris for almost four years. Eugene Bullard, a decorated
volunteer in the French army in World War I and successful businessman
in Black Montmartre, also chose to stay in Paris after the Occupation.
But he was wounded after volunteering for a second time to serve in the
French military, and joined millions of other French citizens in the
march south before advancing Nazi troops. He finally succeeded in
escaping the country from the southern resort town of Biarritz, where
he boarded a ship to the United States.
The end of World
War II brought a new generation of African Americans to Paris. Richard
Wright was probably the most influential of the "black intellectuals"
who took up residence on the Left Bank of the Seine. He decided to
raise his family in Paris, settling there permanently in 1947. He also
became involved in literary and political activities such as the
founding of the journal Presence Africaine and the establishment of the
French-American Fellowship, a group committed to promoting racial
equality.
James Baldwin also spent a great deal of time
in Paris, though he never considered it to be truly home. He traveled
back and forth between France and America several times, ultimately
resigning himself to becoming a permanent expatriate. During later
trips to the U.S. he became increasingly involved in the civil rights
struggle emerging in the U.S., and eventually organized a march on the
American Embassy in Paris to support Dr. King’s March on Washington in
1963.
The political upheavals surrounding the civil
rights movement and the Vietnam War protests in the United States were
mirrored by civil unrest in France. African American William Gardner
Smith, who worked for the French news service Agence France-Presse,
reported the events of the student uprising in May 1968. Many blacks
supported this movement, which escalated into a virtual shutdown of the
entire country. Once order was restored however, a notable increase in
repressive tendencies was observed in the French police and immigration
authorities. People of color were more commonly singled out, and if
collusion with the student uprising was suspected or proven,
deportation was often the result.
Still, African
Americans continued to settle in Paris, as they do to this day. Despite
the evidence of racism in French society, particularly the unashamed
and outspoken bigotry of the political party called the National Front,
black Americans often find that their American citizenship carries more
weight than the color of their skin. In addition, the presence of
enclaves of blacks from many African nations and the Caribbean offer
African Americans the chance to experience black culture in a way that
they cannot at home.
For the past several years, business
and professional people have increasingly taken their place beside the
artists, musicians and writers who have traditionally comprised Paris’
African American population. Photographers, engineers, chefs and
attorneys are among the black professionals currently residing there.
Thus the African American community found in Paris today can be
considered as rich and diverse as those communities found throughout
the United States.
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