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France Orders Positive Spin on Colonialism
France, grappling for decades with its colonial past, has passed a law to put an upbeat spin on a painful era, making it mandatory to enshrine in textbooks the country's "positive role" in its far-flung colonies. But the law is stirring anger among historians and passions in places like Algeria, which gained independence in a brutal conflict. Critics accuse France of trying to gild an inglorious colonial past with an "official history."
As a colonial power, La Belle France wasn't all that hot. Not as destructive as Belgium, a little more competent than Italy, but not as constructive or civilizing as Britain.
At issue is language in the law stipulating that "school programs recognize in particular the positive character of the French overseas presence, notably in North Africa."
JFM probably has a better handle on the character, positive or otherwise, of the French presence in North Africa. Political correctitude probably makes any kind of rational evaluation of whether the colonial presence in sub-Saharan Africa was more beneficial than the current crop of artificially drawn nation states, many of which seem incapable of governing themselves. Zim-Bob-we is only the grossest example.
Deputies of the conservative governing party passed the law in February, but it has only recently come under public scrutiny after being denounced at an annual meeting of historians and in a history professors' petition.
That'd be the politically correct crowd, assuming the law makes any sense at all...
An embarrassed President Jacques Chirac has called the law a "big screw-up," newspapers quoted aides as saying.
I guess it doesn't make any sense, then...
Education Minister Gilles de Robien said this week that textbooks would not be changed. But the law's detractors want it stricken from the books — something the minister says only parliament can do. The measure is one article in a law recognizing the "national contribution" of French citizens who lived in the colonies before independence. It is aimed, above all, at recognizing the French who lived in Algeria and were forced to flee, and Algerians who fought on the side of France. Unlike other colonies, Algeria, the most prized conquest, was considered an integral part of France — just like Normandy. It was only after a brutal eight-year independence war that the French department in North Africa became a nation in 1962, after 132 years of occupation. Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika has equated the law with "mental blindness" and said it smacks of revisionism. The Algerian Parliament has called it a "grave precedent."
Posted by: Fred 2005-10-22
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=132848