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Documents from May 1968

Documents from May 1968

Author Archives: biffbang

Tract – “The Chaos… is the Police!” (26 May 1968)

26 Saturday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in First-hand Account, May 20-26 1968, Police, Tract

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Sunday, May 26, 1968 – 11 am

THE CHAOS … IS THE POLICE!

This morning I see the GMR and police in the Latin Quarter, guns on their shoulders, gathered around trucks that the army is loading with our paving stones. This is done under the semi-protection of a willing student security detail.

At 6pm last night I was released from a 4th arrondissement police station, thanks to the honesty of one man.

This man? A captain of the CRS, who made a report that on the night of Friday and Saturday I had attacked him, but who didn’t press charges. Attacked with what. Nothing to add. The CRS captain is a former Resistance fighter, he has gout, and is a bit paunchy, he is an honest and courageous bureaucrat who told me that his own children are probably on the other side. It was he who, with great difficulty, prevented his men from lynching me. The CRS village idiots have accents from the Cantal/Aveyron region. They senselessly beat their prisoners with batons. I vainly call to the Red Cross (on the police side) in their white coats. The police Red Cross block their ears, and allow the prisoners to be beaten (this is at 3: 30am on Saturday morning, at the top of Rue Barbusse on Boulevard Saint Michel).

The paddy wagon we are crammed into takes 1 hour 30 minutes to reach the Seine. All the streets are blocked by barricades. The tires burst; the CRS feverishly search for cases of grenades, they no longer know where to get fresh supplies. It’s dawn, at the top of Boulevard Saint Michel; the boulevard burns, eight or ten barricades in a row.

Comrades, The sun rises!

5:30am – The truck-full of prisoners reaches the esplanade in front of the Town Hall of the 4th ..

“Oh, la la! What a fine reception committee!” the village idiots comment!

Police vans are lined up along the square in front of the Town Hall. The prisoners are thrown out from the paddy wagons with baton blows and are formed into groups. In front of the Police Station at the Town Hall and before the closed eyes of the bourgeoise houses around the square, each group is thoroughly and systematically clubbed. Then the men are taken into the Station one at a time and beaten again on the way in. Here the GMR take over from the CRS. They seem a little more determined and brutal than the CRS.

In the station, each prisoner is then registered and delivered to the Guardhouse. At the door of the Guardhouse the GMR beat each of us, and inside the city police give the crowd a wholesale beating. We can hear cries, screams, and groans. Blood-soaked men carry girls who can’t walk any longer. This is how our comrades are released into the street. A prisoner comes out of the Guardhouse. He seems to be in agony: a burst liver? He groans softly, a murmur of life .. The city police throw him into a corner like a sack, stepping over him as they leave. It’s not until 15 minutes later that a police ambulance will come to load him up on a stretcher.

About 20 of us were detained, for the statistics. Naturally plenty of foreigners and those the bourgeoisie seeks to make social outcasts since they’ve committed some misdemeanour in their lifetime. The captain’s report allows me to avoid the charms of the Guardhouse. But the cops particularly want to get me because I mock them. They harass me: “Now or later, we’ll have your hide, old fart”. All day this theme returns, embellished with “The Seine or three bullets .. we’ll get rid of you today!”

8 am – We are caged. The police come to the bars and don’t suspect that to us they are the Zoo animals that we watch behind bars. Amongst ourselves there is fraternity, including the poor pickpockets and those humiliated by this society that we want no more of. The cops press themselves against the bars, insulting and spitting at the prisoners.

Blood drips on the ground. The policemen’s ladies, decked out like pin-ups, come to offer their service and simper with the cops; inspectors walk in the blood with the most supreme indifference. The city police come to seize a prisoner from the cage and a sadist, applauded by his colleagues, sets out to crush his toes with a hammer, starting off symbolically but then less symbolically hits him on the head.

10am – A doctor bravely insists on treating the injured. All the blood-soaked young people and “outcasts” don’t dare say anything. I’m the only one not covered in blood, but the doctor is able to send me to hospital. The police go after him and threatened him with a beating. Four policemen escorted me to the Hotel Dieu. On the way it’s the same “we’ll do you in, old fart!…” An “intellectual” cop gives a “political” analysis: “Wait until it’s like Moscow here, they know how to do it. They’ll eliminate bastards like you. But us, the police, we’re always needed ..We’re not worried, but whatever happens, your number’s up..”

Hotel Dieu: the strike committee “at the service of the public” watches the police car with hostility. I raise up my fist. A young intern immediately makes contact: “Comrade ..” The police want to shove past him. The intern faces them: “Stop, this isn’t your place..” He manages to get me alone while the cops stand guard at the door. He checks that I don’t have a fracture. The comrades are notified, and while the X-rays are developed I tell the thugs: “Now you’re in a jam, if you beat or get rid of me, it’ll be reported.” The cops grumble, and talk amongst themselves, worried. Their badge numbers were recorded when they entered the hospital. When explanations are needed, they will be named, and I will be able to testify that this is only a sample of four, amongst all the police on duty at the 4th that day.

1 pm – I’m taken back to the cage. There’s no-one there but an unfortunate foreigner, who has been arrested because of an unexecuted deportation order. He’s the only human being there and I make him my comrade. He was arrested last night and would like a glass of water. I ask an inspector if he has a right to this glass of water, he shrugs and refuses to even respond.

The cops are lined up clowning around, enjoying a snack. They count their grenades, play the hard-man, and claim they’ll open fire on any gathering of more than 5 people … While the whole city has is covered with rallies at crossroads ..

At 5pm we are taken out of the cage, the foreigner first. The cops (city police) make him kneel down with arms outstretched, state that he’s a bastard, and ask the police’s forgiveness. Then he’s made to get up with a final “caress” ..

Last trip to the police station in the paddy wagon. Some ordinary “civil servants” discuss strengthening the network of informers. A superintendent and his deputy seem capable of asking questions and feigning dialogue, perhaps genuinely.

“What did you attack the captain with?”

“I stand by his report .. In your ranks that night I found only one man who was still a man. Yes, I attacked him and I continue the fight. ”

It can be said of the superintendent that he had the distinction of holding on to the vestiges of humanity with less courage and risk that the captain of the other night, the former resistance fighter, who I salute.

A bit later, in this same police station, in front of the same superintendent, the cops escorting him said: “The quarter has to be burned, completely, it’s the only way to destroy the .. ”

– Good people of the Latin Quarter, our friends, you have been warned!

– Friends, firefighters who faithfully do your job, every person on the barricades is your only true intermediary, they are the only men and you know it … There are fires that are useful to protect us from the brutes. These fires mustn’t threaten the houses that we protect and that protect us. The arsonists are on the other side, together we will get through their straitjacket ..

An immediate task for our young commune is: to organise the fight together and to protect our neighbourhoods from the helmeted hordes of chaos. They are the thugs!

Gerald SUBERVILLE – engineer
CGT delegate of his workplace.
Reserve Captain – Resistance Medal

Photo – Demonstration (13 May 1968 – Photo Azeustarck)

26 Saturday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in May 13-19 1968, Photograph

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On banner:

“The Youth of Hauts-de-Seine
Are for trades and jobs with wages greater than 600F
Want: A Programme of Nationalisation and a Popular Government”

Photographic print

(13 May 1968 – Photo Azeustarck)

16 x 23.5cm

On rear of photo:

Photo – Cohn-Bendit Press Conference (6 May 1968 – Interpress Photo)

25 Friday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Interpress Agency, May 6-12 1968, Photograph

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SUNDAY 7 MAY 9:35pm

DANIEL COHN-BENDIT during an outdoor press conference in front of the Sorbonne on 6 May 1968.

Photographic print

(6 May 1968 – Interpress Photo)

12.5 x 17.5cm

Journal – Anarchy 89 – The May Days in France (June 1968)

25 Friday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in First-hand Account, Journal

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(Click on image to view PDF of full document)

Photo – CRS and Protestors (24 May 1968 – Associated Press)

24 Thursday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Associated Press, May 20-26 1968, Photograph, Police, Students

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Photographic print

(24 May 1968 – AP)

16.5 x 21.5cm

Photo – CRS and Protestors (23 May 1968 – Associated Press)

23 Wednesday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Associated Press, May 20-26 1968, Photograph, Police, Students

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Photographic print

(23 May 1968 – AP)

16.5 x 21.5cm

Poster – “(French & Immigrant) Workers All United – Equal Pay for Equal Work” (22 May 1968 – Atelier Populaire)

22 Tuesday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Atelier Populaire, May 20-26 1968, Poster, Workers

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“(French & Immigrant) Workers All United – Equal Pay for Equal Work”

(22 May 1968 – Atelier Populaire)

Brown screenprint on newspaper

71 x 85cm

Documented in:
Mesa p32; Dobson #154; UUU p29; Peters #62; Beaubourg #128; Camard #94b; Wlassikoff p62, Beauty #66; Gasquet p161; Murs #106; Chartres #7

Online References:
BNF
ENSBA #10813

Cartoon – Siné (21 May 1968)

21 Monday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Action, Cartoon, Enragés, May 6-12 1968, PCF, Siné, Waldeck Rochet

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Study for cartoon – Siné

Pen on tracing paper

9.5 x 13.3cm

In it’s final form this cartoon was published in issue 3 of the journal Action – on 21 May 1968, as below:

The text translates as: ”Take the photos of those two Enragés away from me!”.

The speaker is Waldeck Rochet – the General Secretary of the French Communist Party. “Enragé” was used a designation for ultra-leftists during May 1968, in reference to a radical leftist group from the French Revolution.

Tract – 2 Altered Comic Strips (May 1968 – CMDO, Situationist International)

20 Sunday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in CMDO, Internationale Situationniste, Tract

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This is the first of many detourned (altered) comic strips issued as tracts by the CMDO (a group mostly made up of members of the Situationist International and the Nanterre Énrages).

Comic Strip #1

1. All power to the Workers’ Councils! The Unions are only a tool for integration into capitalist society.
(Signature) The Striking Workers.

2. – Something has changed, Mr. President!
– Yes. The workers want to run their own affairs!

3. – The best thing we can do is to bugger off!

Comic Strip #2

1. (Caption) The “leftist” minister picks up the phone.
– Whore! Hijacker!

2. – I’ve been EXPOSED! The scheme won’t work any more!

3. (Caption) Meanwhile…
– I should never have married a minister! I’m off to a factory that’s on strike!

Cartoon/Tract – “The Pain in the Arse General Reads” (after 19 May 1968)

19 Saturday May 2018

Posted by biffbang in Cartoon, de Gaulle, May 20-26 1968, Tract

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“The Pain in the Arse General Reads”

“No matter how lofty is one’s place, he always sits on his bottom” – Montaigne

Cartoon in pencil – signed YB

21 x 32.5cm

I received this original cartoon in a selection of tracts which also included a few photocopies of it, implying that it was used as a tract at the time.

The cartoon refers to de Gaulle’s infamous speech of 19 May where he used the phrase “La réforme oui, la chienlit non!”. Taken on face value the phrase means “Reform yes, chaos no!”. But de Gaulle also intended a scatological pun here, where “chienlit” is “chie-en-lit” – shit-in-the-bed.

The phrase in important enough to have its own article on wikipedia which explains the allusions.

This cartoon piles the puns on to breaking point. The title takes “chienlit” as “chiant lit”. So here the General reads (“lit”) – with “chiant” describing him as boring, annoying or most likely “a pain in the arse”.

The drawing leaves little to the imagination – showing the general “chie” (shitting) while “lit” (reading) the “Gazette de la Chienlit”.

Finally the quote from Montaigne underscores the meaning once more.

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