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Documents from May 1968

Documents from May 1968

Monthly Archives: May 2016

Tract – “Your struggle is our struggle!” (21 May 1968 – Mouvement du 22 Mars)

21 Saturday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in May 20-26 1968, Mouvement du 22 Mars, Students, Tract, Uncategorized, Workers

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(Translated in Fisera – Document 59)

YOUR STRUGGLE IS OUR STRUGGLE!

 We are occupying the faculties, you are occupying the factories. Aren’t we fighting for the same thing?

Higher education only contains 10 per cent workers’ children. Are we fighting so that there will be more of them, for a democratic university reform? That would be a good thing, but it’s not the most important. These workers children would just become like other students. We are not aiming for a worker’s son to be a manager, We want to wipe out segregation between workers and management.

 There are students who are unable to find jobs on leaving university. Are we fighting so that they’ll find jobs, for a decent graduate employment policy? It would be a good thing, but it is not vital. Psychology or sociology graduates will become the selectors, the planners and psycho-technicians who will try to organise your working conditions; mathematics graduates will become engineers, perfecting maximum-productivity machines to make your life even more unbearable. Why are we, students who are products of middle-class life, criticising capitalist society? The son of a worker who becomes a student leaves his own class. For the son of a middle-class family, it could be his opportunity to see his class in its true light, to question the role he is destined for in society and the organisation of our society. We refuse to besome scholars who are out of touch with real life. We refuse to be used for the benefit of the ruling class. We want to destroy the separation that exists between those who organise and think and those who execute their decisions. We want to form a classless society; your cause is the same as ours.

 You are asking for a minimum wage of 1,000 Francs in the Paris area, retirement at sixty, a 40-hour week for 48 hours’ pay.

 These are long-standing and just demands: nevertheless. they seem to be out of context with our aims. Yet you have gone on to occupy factories, take your managers as hostages, strike without warning, These forms of struggle have been made possible by perseverance and lengthy action in various enterprises, and because of the recent student battles.

 These struggles are even more radical than our official aims. because they go further than simply seeking improvements for the worker within the capitalist system, they imply the destruction of the system. They are political in the true sense of the word: you are fighting not to change the Prime Minister, but so that your boss no longer retains his power in business or society. The form that your struggle has taken offers us students the model for true socialist activity: the appropriation of the means of production and of the decision-making power by the workers.

 Our struggles converge. We must destroy everything that seeks to alienate us (everyday habits, the press, etc.). We must combine our occupations in the faculties and factories.

Long live the unification of our struggles !

Everybody to the four rallies and the demonstration at the Gare de Lyon, on Friday May 24 May 1968, at 7 p.m.

Movement of 22 March 1968

Tract – “Manifesto I” (20 May 1968 – Comité de Coordination des Cadres Contestataires)

20 Friday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in May 20-26 1968, Tract, Uncategorized

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(Translated in Fisera – Document 181)

20 MAY 1968

MANIFESTO 1

The student movement has sparked off, among a large number of managerial staff, a new analysis of their purpose in the enterprises and of the goals of the consumer society that they are helping to construct, whether consciously or not. 

For these managerial staff, the student movement represents a fundamental questioning of the nature of our society. This questioning may have given rise to verbal excesses, which only express the depth of the problem in question. The managerial classes believe that they have an important role to play in order to contribute to the formation of bases and structures for a society which will turn man into something other than a consumer.

A revolution of this type means:

1. The elaboration of an original industrial society going beyond those which are normally proposed, whether they be of the American or of the Soviet type. This society’s basic characteristic will be that it is built for and by all the wage-earners, who will constitute its driving force.

2. The working out of concrete situations for the democratisation of the management of industry, and of general economic programmed, to the usual objectives of profitability and expansion – of which the material gains are real – must be added the goal of personal fulfilment at work as well as in free time activities.

In the short term – for the same reason as the questioning of society – the questioning of the trade-union and political organisations entrusted with defending and expressing the hopes of the wage-earning classes. becomes a necessity.

Aware that the battle being fought at the universities cannot be brought to a successful conclusion without the spreading of the movement to all economic sectors. the “C 4” proposes:

— to participate alongside the students in the reorganisation of educational structures and methods;

— to introduce both reflection and action in professional circles.

The Coordination Committee 
of the Protesting Managers – “C 4”

Tract – “Reproduction of some tracts distributed in the Sorbonne on May 16” (19 May 1968 – CMDO)

19 Thursday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in CMDO, Internationale Situationniste, Students, Tract, Uncategorized

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(Translated by Ken Knabb except for “Vigilance!” – taken from “Enragés & Situationists in the Occupation Movement, France May ’68” – Viénet (Autonomedia/Rebel Press, 1992) )

Comrades, hundreds of tracts are published every day. Choose the best and reproduce them yourselves or send them to the printers who are on strike.

—————————————————————————————————–
REPRODUCTION OF SOME TRACTS DISTRIBUTED IN THE SORBONNE ON MAY 16.
—————————————————————————————————–

Comrades,

Considering that the Sud-Aviation factory at Nantes has been occupied for two days by the workers and students of that city…
and that today the movement is spreading to several factories (Nouvelles Messageries de la Presse Parisienne in Paris, Renault in Cléon, etc.),
THE SORBONNE OCCUPATION COMMITTEE calls for
the immediate occupation of all the factories in France and the formation of Workers Councils.

Comrades, spread and reproduce this appeal as quickly as possible.
Sorbonne, 16 May 1968 – 3:30 pm
—————————————————————————————————–

SLOGANS TO BE SPREAD NOW 
by EVERY MEANS

(leaflets, announcements over microphones, comic strips, songs, graffiti, speech bubbles on paintings in the Sorbonne, announcements in theatres during films or while disrupting them, speech bubbles on subway billboards, before making love, after making love, in elevators, each time you raise your glass in a bar):

OCCUPY THE FACTORIES
POWER TO THE WORKERS’ COUNCILS
ABOLISH CLASS SOCIETY
DOWN WITH THE SPECTACLE-COMMODITY SOCIETY
ABOLISH ALIENATION
END THE UNIVERSITY
HUMANITY WON’T BE HAPPY UNTIL THE LAST BUREAUCRAT IS HUNG WITH THE GUTS OF THE LAST CAPITALIST
DEATH TO THE COPS
ALSO FREE THE 4 GUYS CONVICTED FOR LOOTING ON MAY 6TH

OCCUPATION COMMITTEE OF THE
PEOPLE’S FREE SORBONNE UNIVERSITY
16 May 68, 7pm
—————————————————————————————————–

VIGILANCE!

Comrades,

The supremacy of the revolutionary assembly can only mean something if it exercises its power.
For the last 48 hours even the capacity of the general assembly to make decisions has been challenged by a systematic obstruction of all proposals for action.
Up until now no motion could be voted on or even discussed, and bodies elected by the general assembly (Occupation Committee and Coordinating Committee) see their work sabotaged by pseudo-spontaneous groups.
All the debates on organisation, which people wanted to argue about before any action, are pointless if we do nothing.

AT THIS RATE, THE MOVEMENT WILL BE BURIED IN THE SORBONNE!

The prerequisite of direct democracy is the minimum support that revolutionary students can give to revolutionary workers who are occupying their factories.
It is inexcusable that yesterday evenings incidents in the GA should pass without retaliation.
The priests are holding us back when anti-clerical posters are torn up.
The bureaucrats are holding us back when, without even giving their names, they paralyse the revolutionary awareness that can take the movement forward from the barricades.
Once again, its the future that is sacrificed to the re-establishment of the old unionism.
Parliamentary cretinism wants to take over the rostrum, as it tries to put the old, patched-up system back on its feet again.

Comrades,
The reform of the university alone is insignificant, when it is the whole of the old world which is to be destroyed.
The movement is nothing if it is not revolutionary.

OCCUPATION COMMITTEE OF THE SORBONNE, May 16, 1968, 4:30 P.M.
—————————————————————————————————–

WATCH OUT FOR MANIPULATORS! 
WATCH OUT FOR BUREAUCRATS!

Comrades,

No one should be unaware of the importance of the General Assembly this evening (Thursday, May 16). Over the last two days several individuals, recognisable from having previously been seen peddling their various party lines, have succeeded in sowing confusion and in smothering the GAs under a barrage of bureaucratic manipulations whose crudeness clearly demonstrates the contempt they have for this assembly.

This assembly must learn how to make itself respected or disappear. Two points must be discussed above all:
– WHO CONTROLS THE SECURITY MARSHALS? whose disgusting role is intolerable.
– WHY IS THE PRESS COMMITTEE — which dares to censor the communiqués that it is charged to transmit to the news agencies — composed of apprentice journalists who are careful not to disappoint the ORTF bosses so as not to jeopardise their future job possibilities?

Apart from that: Considering that the workers are beginning to occupy several factories in France, FOLLOWING OUR EXAMPLE AND WITH THE SAME RIGHT WE HAVE, the Sorbonne Occupation Committee issued a statement approving of this movement at 3pm this afternoon. The central problem of this evening’s GA is therefore to declare itself by a clear vote supporting or disavowing this appeal of its Committee.

Tract – “Enough!” (18 May 1968 – anonymous rightist/Gaullist)

18 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in Gaullist, May 13-19 1968, Tract, Uncategorized

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(Translated in Fisera – Document 66)


ENOUGH

1) Of the thousands of red flags
  – flying on public buildings
  – on marches and demonstrations
  – in the lecture halls

2) Of the Internationale
  – being sung by demonstrators with clenched fists

3) Of the French Flag
  – being profaned, torn, burned in public places
  – being turned into filthy rags
  – and the tomb of the Unknown Soldier being defiled

4) Of the anarchy which is setting in
  – the University being turned into a filthy hovel
  – the CNRS in a state of cultural revolution
   – the strikes
  – the Odeon being turned into a rubbish dump
  – the frescoes in the SORBONNE being daubed with paint.

THERE IS NO MORE LAW

 Law and order no longer exits.
 The communist revolution is in preparation and is scoring more points each day.
 To combat the subversion which takes advantage of disorder to establish itself: 

EVERYONE TO PLACE DE L’ÉTOILE, SATURDAY at 6.00 p.m.

Poster – “Students, Workers Together” (17 May 1968 – Atelier Populaire)

17 Tuesday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in Atelier Populaire, May 13-19 1968, Poster, Students, Uncategorized, Workers

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“Students,  workers together”  

(17 May 1968 – Atelier Populaire) 


Blue screen-print on newsprint (no stamp)

44 x 70 cm

Documented in:
Gasquet p. 147 ; Wlassikoff p.26 ; Beaubourg #152, Mesa p21 ; Beauty #113 ; Dobson #135; Artcurial #422; Les Affiches #12

Online References:
ENSBA # 10706

Tract – “The UNEF Proposes” (16 May 1968 – UNEF)

16 Monday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in May 13-19 1968, Students, Tract, Uncategorized, UNEF

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(Translated in Fisera – Document 53, and in Schnapp -Document 111)

THE UNEF PROPOSES…

 Considering the extension of the student and workers’ movement in Paris and the provinces, together with the outcome of preliminary discussions which have been taking place in the faculties, the UNEP national executive (national bureau) considers it to be its duty to sketch out a preliminary balance-sheet of events and to put forward some ideas for restarting discussions and action in all French universities. At all events, one thing is clear: the radical dispute going on within the university is inseparable from the challenge to the established power structure, in other words, the battle is currently taking on a political nature.
 At a time when the movement started by students is taking on a new perspective (factory occupations by workers), it is vital that we overcome any attempt to smother the movement, either by limiting its aims to purely university matters or by considering unity do be possible only in the forecourt of the Sorbonne. This is why it is so important for us to participate in the dynamic movement of social confrontation, chiefly by developing in the universities a potential for assertive demands. It is vital to put forward suggestions complying with this analysis.

 Four main objectives can be suggested to the student movement:
 1. The immediate establishment of real student power in the faculties, with the right to veto any decisions made;
 2. Depending on this first point, the autonomy of universities and faculties;
 3. The extension of the struggle to all sectors involved with broadcasting the predominant ideology, which means the media;
 4. The real unification of workers and peasants causes by bringing up the same sort of confrontation with authority in the factories.

 These four vital factors will create the conditions necessary for solving other problems (exams, selection, political and trade-union freedom in faculties, schools and elsewhere).

I – STUDENT POWER 

 Whether it is by means of the Critical University, or by predominantly student committees or by a complete transformation of faculty meetings, what is important is that the student movement retains control over all decisions made in the University. Whatever structures are discussed at local level, it is the students right of veto which will allow decisions to become fact and prevent integration. 
 This measure must come into effect immediately, it alone justifies the continuation of the strike. 
 We all know, however, that in a capitalist regime such power can only be temporary.

II – UNIVERSITY AUTONOMY 

 Without student power, the autonomy of the university would be a mere trap. giving authority back do the university mandarins. On the other hand, without autonomy student power is a trap, since the government and administration retain the means of control. Autonomy means that all decisions taken by students in collaboration with the staff will come into effect immediately.

III – EXTENDING THE STRUGGLE TO ALL IDEOLOGICAL FIELDS

 It is by means of the media that the bourgeoisie is trying to destroy the movement, so it is by this means that we must publicise our actions and make them understood. This means that any source of information that toes the governments line must be fought whether it be the ORTF, private radio stations or the press. Not one paper must appear if it gives false information. We must act in close communication with journalists and printing workers. In the same way, youth and cultural centres, theatres and all artistic professions must join the struggle for the creation of a new people’s culture.

IV – LINKS BETWEEN WORKERS’ AND STUDENTS’ STRUGGLES

 The downfall of the present ruling power can only occur if the battle is led by the workers themselves. This means that the main strength behind changes in society remains the working class. Workers must take their futures into their own hands and fight against the power of management in business. For our part, this implies systematic participation in the discussions taking place in the working class – in order to present out point of view, and not to give lessons, Also, every university under student control should be open to workers, and in all discussions.
 The four points set out here should enable us to act and bring about the other demands which affect us:

 1. The boycott of traditional exams which only serve to eliminate students from a bankrupt education system. A provisional synthesis of the discussions enables us to present the following points:

 a) There is no question of victimising students for challenging the exams. This means it is inconceivable that the students should lose a year, nor that the militants who fought while others stayed at home, or who were wounded should suffer.
 Seeing that the challenge to the exam system is closely tied to a complete change in education, any discussions on how to test students’ knowledge are subordinate to it. What is important in the present climate is:
– student control of all exam procedures, or an alternative method for obtaining certificates ;
– in certain subjects, changing the contents of exams ;
– student control of all decisions ;

 b) There is no question of allowing exams and competition for national awards in their present form:
– we suggest changing the competitive award for the CAPES into an exam: this would mean success would not depend on rationing the posts available ;
– the baccalauréat: it is no longer feasible for the exam to continue under its present form. At the very least, we advocate that school students have the power of control and that all candidates have the right to take the oral exam.

 2. Political and trade-union freedoms are a fact in the faculties. They should also become so (student power having the right of veto) in the grandes écoles and secondary schools, UNEF declares itself in solidarity with the CAL on this point, and will support and participate in the struggle for recognition for the CAL in schools and for their complete freedom of action and expression.

 3. No selection at entry and throughout higher education. Given that a complete change in education is a primary objective, we declare ourselves against any form of selection.

What Should Be Done Right Now?                                    

1. It is essential to continue discussion of fundamental issues in every domain and on every level. But from now on, the UNEF calls on its militants immediately to seize control of university institutions. If discussions with the teachers remain necessary, the right of veto on all decisions taken is the only valid guarantee.
The control to be set up in terms of relative strength can only be given to the combat, strike, or action committees that have actually led the action during these last ten days. Wherever the relative strength is not favourable we must have recourse to parallel structures (the counter university or others) in order to maintain pressure that would make it possible to obstruct the functioning of the traditional University. This line, which is applicable under present circumstances, can be altered according to the evolution of our relative strength.

2. Proclamation of autonomy must be demanded now. But this proclamation must be made only if the first point (right of veto) has been obtained, and with all the necessary guarantees that this autonomy will not bring about a reinforcement of the conservative and technocratic professional fraction.

3. The mass media battle must be waged in every university city. This means that no regional newspaper can come out if it has not accurately presented information concerning our struggle, demonstrations, occupation of premises, boycott of distribution, etc., will be organised in collaboration with newspaper workers.
The battle in the cultural sector can also be waged with young workers in order to orient the activity of youth and cultural centres toward combat (occupations, organisation of political discussions, etc.).
As regards other sectors of cultural life, participation will take place in agreement with artists who have taken a stand against bourgeois culture.

4. Occupation of factories by the workers has already begun. Our role is to broaden the campaign of political explanation to prevent the government and the reactionaries from separating the student and worker struggles. The UNEP militants will therefore take part in the meetings, assemblies, and demonstrations decided upon by the workers, this participation being considered by us as a priority.

This series of proposals has been introduced into the free discussions that have been going on for several days now in the university.

NATIONAL BOARD OF THE UNEF

Poster – “Nanterre is open to everyone” (? May 1968 – Atelier Populaire)

15 Sunday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in Atelier Populaire, Nanterre, Poster, Students, Uncategorized

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NANTERRE
The only University hall of Residence CLOSED
because of the government’s fear,
IS OPEN TO ALL
The 500 000 unoccupied buildings in the Parisian region must be opened in the way, for the workers suffering from the housing crisis.
ALL TO THE RESIDENCE
MEETING THURSDAY 3PM
IN FRONT OF REFECTORY U
Leave from Gare St Lazare, arrive at La Folie.

Red screen-print on newsprint (Atelier Populaire stamp)

50.5 x 75 cm

Documented in:
Camard #27bis ; Beauty #184b

Online Resources:
BNF 

Tract – “Call” (14 May 1968 – La Coordination des Comités d’Action)

14 Saturday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in Comites d'Action, Coordination des Comités d'Action, May 13-19 1968, Tract, Uncategorized

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(Translated in Beauty pp 206-7) 


CALL

Since Friday, May 3 tens of thousands of undergraduates, high school students, teachers, and young workers have engaged in a new kind of combat in the streets and faculties alike.
Beginning at Nanterre with the questioning through proper methods of action of the bourgeois university’s terms and methods, the movement today poses the question of overthrowing the Gaullist regime.

HOW DID IT COME TO THIS?

The groundswell, provoked by the attempt of the government and the French academic authorities to break by force the slowly developing agitation, had causes that it is important to investigate and understand. The resistance and combative spirit of the students provoked a sort of supportive enthusiasm from the people who dared to resist the CRS, mobile guards, and other police. Certainly the workers were moved by the brutality of the police repression, but it was the fact of seeing the students not behaving like sheep and resisting by fighting that constituted the new state of affairs. Since Monday the sixth, at the end of the morning we see young workers beginning to come out to fight alongside the students. The rancour the cold-heartedness provoked over the years by police persecution, and the daily vexations all exploded. The anti-strike repression, the CRS in the factories, the pigs’ raids against the children of the poor suburbs, all the daily manifestations of a State largely based on the strength of its police – all of this resurged. Abruptly freed by the announcement of combat numerous energies came to join with the students “against the cops”. Of the many possible points of attack against a ten-year-old regime, symbol of all of the conservatism of the French bourgeoisie and of the attempts made in its heart at “modernising” the exploitation of workers, it is the hatred of the police, the hatred of repression, that is the principal driving force of the action. A lesson to consider!

THE UNCERTAINTY OF THE MOMENT

3,000 on May 3, 15,000 on the sixth, 40,000 on the seventh, over 10,000 behind the barricades on the tenth, we were more than a million on May 13 for the general strike. And nevertheless… since May 13, there is a growing malaise. The words “burial” (of the movement) and “recuperation” (by the parliamentary parties) are mentioned constantly. Many fear that the support and reserves that were given to us by the leaders of the central workers’ organisations were a poisoned chalice. We have occupied the colleges, occupied the Sorbonne, but nothing is settled as long as Pompidou plays at being “savior-returned-from-distant-lands”. 

This period of uncertainty is the natural consequence of the two essential characteristics of the movement: its disorganisation and its programmatic deficiencies. While they safeguard us against the ossification of thought and sectarianism of many extreme Left groups, these two elements risk driving the movement at large to collapse if we do not take care.

TWO TRENDS

Indeed, two trends become clear from the many discussions of these last three Weeks. On the one hand are those who wish to profit from the “academic crisis” to make the government operate in the place of “academic reforms” These are often the same ones who readily agreed with seeing the occupation of the Sorbonne as a return to the pathetic folklore of yesteryear. On the other hand are those who during the week of the barricades, revived the hope of revolutionary action. These wish for the overthrow of the regime more than the “joint management of the University”, alliance with the workers more than alliance with the “great profs” who yesterday declared themselves our enemies and today pretend to be sweet. The occupation of the Rhodiaceta Tuesday morning, and of Sud-Aviation in Nantes today, shows the way. The point is not to simplistically oppose all academic demands with general political demands. All are legitimate and necessary. The point is to organise a hierarchy of their importance.

(page 2)

POLITICS AT THE FIRST RANK

The same two trends become clear on the frontlines On the one hand, those who accept sinking into the colleges to resume a “normal, improved life”; on the other, those who want to transform our reconquered colleges into an externally-focused base of action. Against the cops, it used to be necessary to say “the Sorbonne for the students”. Now that we have it, its necessary to cry “the Sorbonne for the workers”. We must use our conquered colleges as the red base where the movement organises itself, from which propaganda groups go out toward the poor suburbs and the working-class districts, where the daily outcome of the struggle lies. Now, it’s necessary to –

GO TOWARD THE WORKING CLASS

Not to organise ourselves, but to take advantage of the audience that has given us our courage and explained the necessity of overthrowing the regime. In the poor suburbs we must go to restore the sincerity of our struggle, to say why we are against capitalism. We must also go to learn the concrete truth of that which we know from books: the exploitation of work. Now, finally, we must take back the streets, for it is there that the confrontation is taking place and that the alliance with the workers is being made.

THE SORBONNE IS OUR BASE, IT IS NOT THE BATTLEGROUND

Three trends are expressed about the question of organisation. The leaders only intend to profit from the situation in order to strengthen their own group, unaware that if the masses refuse to enter it is not uniquely the consequence of their weak politicisation, but because they refuse their leaders’ sectarian quarrels or their opportunistic parliamentarism Others propose to organise as little as possible in order to guard the movement’s creative spontaneity. These comrades are fooling themselves as well, for they do not understand that while it is possible for 500 to organise themselves spontaneously to make a barricade, it is totally impossible to overthrow the regime using the same means. Its necessary to organise the base, in action, for action.

ACTION COMMITTEES EVERYWHERE

Their form can be diverse: the disciplinary base, the base of small districts, the base of the workplace, etc. But they have this in common: they are units of small size, of 10 to 30 people, because they are made for discussion, and they are above all made for action. When there is an assembly of 200 people, split it into 10 Committees! 
Each Committee gets together every one or two days. 

– Each Committee sends a delegate to the daily coordination meeting, at 2 p.m., at the Sorbonne, staircase C, first floor (at 6 p.m. for those who cant make it at 2 p.m.). 

– Each committee makes contact with nearby Committees (for example: all the Committees of the 15th arrondissement or all the “Institutional” Committees or all the “Science” Committees, etc.) to establish intermediate coordination. 

– Each Committee realises its own initiative and sign.

– Each Committee gives its advice on which course to follow and posts it. 

– A solitary person doesn’t wait to be given his instructions; he regroups some comrades, and can make contact with the co-ordinators. 

– The members of the Committees participate in debates in the lecture halls, in the committees, etc., but they do not set this against participation in their Committee. These debates are for the elevation of the general level of realisation through discussion, without taboos, on all subjects but thats it; they are not the place for organising action.

NO TO ACADEMIC REFORMISM AND TO APOLITICAL FOLKLORE
LET’S OPEN THE VOTE TO THE REVOLUTIONARY PROTEST OF THE REGIME

The Coordination of the Action Committees

Tract – “All unite to make May 13 a great day of struggle” (13 May 1968- Parti Communiste Français)

13 Friday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in May 13-19 1968, PCF, Tract, Uncategorized, Union

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Workers, students, teachers

All unite to make May 13
a great day of struggle

 The Gaullist government has been forced to make its first retreat. It had to consider: the power of the students’ and teachers’ movement; the support of the workers and democratic forces for the student victims of repression; and the call of trade unions for a general strike and powerful demonstrations for May 13 – which is a decisive factor in the government retreat.

 The French Communist Party is calling on you to make this day of struggle a great success, to compel the government to quickly implement the announced measures, and obtain:
 – full and complete amnesty for the convicted;
 – the immediate release of the imprisoned;
 – the total withdrawal of police forces from university premises and the Latin Quarter;
 – the immediate reopening of schools and the conduct of examinations and tests without candidates having to suffer difficulties because of these events.

 That is not enough. The legitimate discontent and the struggles of students and teachers have their origin in the deep crisis in the University. To address this crisis, with the workers, students and teachers, we require:
 – The rapid creation of new Faculties and technical colleges, suited to contemporary realities, and the appointment of a sufficient number of qualified teachers.
 – The satisfaction of the claims of the students: study grants; the development of social and cultural works co-managed with the participation of students; the establishment of a democratic life in universities and colleges.

 These are the primary objectives in the struggle for a democratic and modern University to replace the current class-based University.

 Against the power of the capitalist monopolies, the factory and office workers are fighting for increases in wages, the guarantee of jobs and resources, the repeal of anti-social orders, the respect and extension of trade union freedoms.

 Thus, the essential interests of students, factory workers, and of all manual and office workers converge. The realization of their just aspirations is possible only by eliminating this government of personal power and by the institution of a new and genuine democracy, paving the way for socialism.

 To this end, the French Communist Party works to strengthen mutual ties between the working class, the decisive force of our time, and all the other people’s forces, to strengthen the union of workers and democratic forces.

ENSURE THE SUCCESS OF THE STRIKE AND THE DEMONSTRATION
EVERYONE TO REPUBLIQUE AT 3P.M.!

The Federations of Paris, Essonne, Hauts-de-Seine, Seine-Saint-Denis, Val-de-Marne, Val-d’Oise, the Yvelines of the French Communist Party.

Tract – “Against the Police State, We Continue the Fight in the Streets” (12 May 1968 – Mouvement du 22 Mars)

12 Thursday May 2016

Posted by biffbang in May 6-12 1968, Mouvement du 22 Mars, Students, Tract, Uncategorized

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(Translated in Schnapp – Document 61)

AGAINST THE POLICE STATE WE MUST CONTINUE THE FIGHT

Following in the footsteps of the workers of Caen, Mulhouse, Le Mans, Redon, and the Rhodiaceta, during the night of Friday, May 10, 1968, University and high-school students, teachers, and workers who demonstrated against police state repression, fought in the streets for several hours against 10,000 cops. The bourgeoisie tried to crush a form of protest and demands that directly threatens the regime. The repression was fierce, the resistance tenacious. The cops used all means: incendiary bombs, DEADLY GASES (C.B. and C.S. gas are forbidden by international agreements and unknown to the medical services), chlorine grenades, bullets made of hard plastic. The demonstrators and the population were asphyxiated by the gases, wounded by gunflash, beaten with bludgeons and blackjacks, pursued into apartment houses, given the “third degree” in the police stations, arrested by the hundreds. Red Cross first aid stations were sacked; wounded on stretchers were beaten hard.

The demonstrators, fully supported by the inhabitants of the Latin Quarter, met this violence with political determination; at the barricades the mercenaries of the bourgeoisie were treated to the delights of Molotov cocktails and a shower of paving stones. Several hundreds of them were put out of commission. Students and workers will not forget this lesson.

Faced with this resistance and increasing support from the working masses, the police state is forced to retreat and would appear to be giving in to the three conditions the demonstrators have posed as prerequisites to any discussion. But the basic problems remain unsolved.

The fight against police repression is the fight against the State and against capitalist exploitation. The cops are nothing but the flunkies of de Gaulle and de Gaulle is nothing but the current flunkey of the bourgeoisie.

In the present stage of the struggle, we demand as a prerequisite to the resumption of University life:

(page 2)

– The definitive release of all demonstrators who are being held, whether students or workers, French or foreigners, and including those whom the bourgeoisie has described as “looters.”
– The immediate and final cessation of legal and administrative action because of political activity, whatever the pretext.

On the other hand, since we have proof of criminal acts committed by the cops during the night of Friday, we demand as a new prerequisite:
– The resignation of the killer, Grimaud, Chief of Police, chief of the Paris coppers.
– The resignation of the killer, Fouchet, Minister of the Interior and number one cop in France.

For such acts not to be repeated it is necessary:
– To start a legal investigation of police crimes, with the participation of representatives of the demonstrators side by side with the magistrates of bourgeois justice
– To disarm the CRS = SS, the gardes-mobiles and other detachments specialised in repression.

It is clear that the bourgeoisie will not want to disarm their executioners.
We will force them to do so through our action.

To make an end to repression, workers and students must win their freedom in the streets. As long as the cops are armed, students and workers must organise their self-defence to victoriously resist organised repression.

DOWN WITH THE POLICE STATE! DOWN WITH CAPITALISM!!
FOR SOCIALISM. WORKERS AND STUDENTS, WE MUST FIGHT IN THE STREETS!

EVERYBODY COME TO THE DEMONSTRATION,
Monday, 13 May 1968
GARE DE L’EST, 1:30 pm

MARCH 22ND MOVEMENT 

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