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Ophelia's Journal.

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Ophelia Ophelia has been starred
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 10:29 am    Post subject: Ophelia's Journal. Reply with quote
I am going to write about my thoughts concerning some issues in France; primarily because it will help me to sort things out, I hope, about things I am less than certain about.


As I will probably be grumbling and griping as I write about those issues
(as in How to be a French Person, Lesson 1), I thought I'd start with an a-typical topic: most popular French person, who happens to be a man.


L'Abbé Pierre
.

L'Abbé Pierre (Henri Grouès) was a Catholic priest who was very influencial in all matters related to housing, fighting poverty and humanitarian causes in this country.
During World War II, he fought in the Résistance.
In 1949 he founded the Emmaüs Movement, which became worldwide later. His philosophy was not in preaching, but in action. There was a housing problem, so he took bricks and started building a house. People saw what he was doing, and joined him.

His recognition became instantly nation-wide in 1954; the winter was particular harsh, and people (whole families) who were homeless or were being evicted for not paying their rents were dying of cold.* L'Abbé Pierre made a now well-known radio speech (it can be read on Wiki, but the words can not render what was conveyed, as no one else could have, to us --general "us", I wasn't born then--).

The TV documentaries which were broadcast again last year showed the incredible reaction he got from all walks of society. He pleaded, and a country of skeptics and individualists understood.

He could lead so well in humanitarian causes in France because of who he was, and I think because he understood French people: what was best in us and why we should be chided into action on many occasions.

He was a devout priest who said mass everyday, and he was a layman in a secular society, and as such I think he represented us. From the beginning, his actions and and Foundations were strictly lay charities (the all important word is "laïque" , referring to total separation between state and Church -- no "In God We trust" on the walls in our tribunals--.


He started a very practical way of helping people in need which is not characteristic of French people I think. We are not, on the whole, a very practical people; for example, I often hear about individual Americans, especially Californians perhaps, building their own houses: this can happen here but it's rare.
As far as charities are concerned, some people here are involved in practical actions, but many -- as I do-- think in therms of sending 1 or 2 checks a year, according to what you feel is appropriate for your income (this works too, it's just different).
So l'Abbé Pierre started unique (especially at the time) organizations in which the jobless, the homeless could learn to help one another, and thus recover their dignity and start relating to other human beings again.
His Foundations did not ask for money.

* [Now we have a law to the effect that when people cannot pay their rents, they cannot be evicted if this happens during the winter months.
I imagine there must be something on those lines in other EU countries, but I don't know.]

Among his many personal characteristics, l'Abbé Pierre openly disagreed with his Catholic hierarchy on subjects such as married clergy or the ordination of women.

He was number 1 on the chart of most popular French people for decades since the 1950's, and only stopped being so when he asked that his name be withdrawn from the chart.


When he died last year, aged 94, we grieved.


The following link to Wiki is (as usual) very good, and also gives photos of him, which I think is important.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abb%C3%A9_Pierre#Death
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 11:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
Ophelia-

I enjoy reading this journal on the french issues. It is extremely interesting and it reveals a distinction between different societies.

I acknowledge your intelligence and I cannot wait to continue reading and learning from your journals Very Happy
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 2:25 pm    Post subject: Ophelia's journal: Immigration in France since the 1960's. Reply with quote
Audrey, with such encouragements I can but go on... Bananadance



My topic is immigration in France: why I don't know more about it, why I haven't been able to find out much when I tried -- I'm still trying-- and why these lacks make it difficult to understand some current events in this country.

I'll need several postings before I can start writing about the topic itself.


Why I don't know much about immigration.


Current events in France aren't my field, my interests are mainly the English speaking world (which can keep you busy forever) or Education in France.
I've rarely read French newspapers, and I have little interest in politics.
(Anyway, now that I've tried to look things up, I doubt if reading newspapers would have helped all that much).
So, I'm your average person here on this issue, I know what most people know, which is, little.
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 2:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
I had never heard of Abbe Pierre, but I have read the Wiki link.

How wonderful....they are still among us.....

I am posting a poem for you Ophelia (and Audrey) with love and only sisterly love.

How to Hide Jesus

There are people after Jesus.
They have seen the signs.
Quick, let's hide him.
Let's think;
carpenter,
fisherman's friend,
disturber of religious comfort.
Let's award him a degree in theology,
a purple cassock
and a position of respect.
They'll never think of looking here.
Let's think;
His dialect may betray him,
His tongue is of the masses.
Let's teach him Latin
and seventeenth-century English,
they'll never think of listening in.

Let's think;
humble,
Man of Sorrows,
nowhere to lay his head.
We'll build a house for him,
somewhere away from the poor,
We'll fill it with brass and silence.
It's sure to throw them off.

There are people after Jesus.
Quick, let's hide him.

Steve Turner - 1949 -

Good Innit?
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 2:57 pm    Post subject: Ophelia's journal: Who emigrates to France? Reply with quote
In the nineteenth century, many people from poor areas in Italy and Poland came to work, taking the hardest jobs in industry.

The pattern in the twentieth century is basically the same as some other rich countries ( Germany, the UK) in the EU:

1- People have come for economic reasons, in their vast majority from former French colonies ( Muslim people from Maghreb countries, and people from other countries in Africa). This started in the 1960's, after decolonization, because French industry was then booming and needed unskilled workers.


2- People come as political refugees.

The concrete applications come from a twentieth century law and European Community laws, but the founding principles date back to the French Revolution and La Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen, 1989 (link below in French) which mentions resistance to oppression.

[u]http://www.memoire-net.org/etran/etran5.html[url]


This has been historically widely accepted in this country (no possible arguing with the founding texts from the French Revolution , just as you don't argue with l'Abbé Pierre, but I doubt I' ll come with many more such examples).

Note: ironically, this has led the French Republic to grant refugee status to some unsavoury characters like... Ayatollah Khomeini.
In 1979, the good Ayatollah was openly sending inflammatory rhetoric in the form of video cassettes to Iran, and was not bothered in any way by the French authorities, although his status as a political refugee clearly stated that he (or others) should not start revolutionary activities from our land while our guest.
Those were the days... post 9/11, the man wouldn't have stood a chance.



This leads me to:

Type 2 immigration is not a problem, for historical reasons and because it concerns only a limited number of people (although later the boundaries of refugee" became unclear).


Type 1 is the subject of my writings.
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 3:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
Tout comprendre est tout pardonner!

That is what we are doing......trying to understand...and you are helping us. You are helping me to understand. Thank you Ophelia!
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 3:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
C'est magnifique. Penelope a raison!

You are not alone Ophelia when you say that currents events aren't your interest. I just cannot get myself involved in all the currents events, because I believe it gets rid of my naivity, and that's just a shame. There are other reasons why I don't get involve such as I don't feel a need to fight with others about politics (which is all that I am surrounded by right now, with the elections drawing near), we as a society should work together! Oh the utopian world.

Penelope- I do not know how you did it, but you knew exactly what I needed. That poem is anything/everything beyond words. (Just for a laugh, I had to look up 'innit' on urban dictionary Rolling Eyes ).

Ophelia, merci pour tous ses travaux. Just as Penelope has said, thank you for helping us understand.

This quote is for you two (in thanks)
Quote:
A mind that is stretched to a new idea never return to its original dimension
-Oliver Wendell Holmes
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 5:17 pm    Post subject: Ophelia's journal: note on Europe. Reply with quote
Merci beaucoup, Audrey et Penelope, pour votre participation et vos encouragements.

Thanks for the lovely poem and the proverb Penelope.


Note on immigration: people coming to France from the EU are not immigrants: they choose to live in another member state - for states which signed the Schengen Agreement-- and do not need a work visa.

( In the 1970's, when this first applied to the original 6 member states, and unemployment was high in France, the cynical joke that went around, perhaps from anti Europeans, was that with the European community you now had the right to choose in which country you wanted to be on the dole!)

For states which are new to the EU, things happen in stages, and now there are many people coming from Eastern European states which are comparatively poor, mostly from Poland. At this stage Polish people need work visas-- it's very complicated. My sister Sophie works in Social Services in Paris, and she tells me that what visas they can apply for also depends on the type of job they do.
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 07, 2008 6:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
We are having lots of Eastern European immigrants here.

It is a dilemma - but I do know that if I were in their shoes, I would want to be in France or England too.

The Newspapers continue to print lots of 'rhetoric' stirring up people against them.....

I think we should guard against giving people a group name, like, Poles, Cheks, Albanians, Jews, Pakistanis, Muslims.....that is always dangerous, surely we must see people as individuals, because I would not like to be judged on everything that has been done in the name of Christianity, or in the name of the British...let alone the English. But then, I am paranoid about patriotism - I hate it with a passion. Love people though.
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PostPosted: Fri Feb 08, 2008 4:48 am    Post subject: Immigration within Europe Reply with quote
Penelope,

I have read and heard a few reports about immigration from Eastern Europe in the UK: I gathered that people feel that all the negative feelings which had not been felt or voiced in the case of previous immigration groups (from Pakistan, India or Africa) is now being expressed with a vengeance about the new immigrants, because they're white, so the attackers (verbal attackers ) can't be accused of being racist (racist remarks, as I read, being against the law).

If true, this has a bearing on what I will be writing about later.
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