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#DeGaulle
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fucknewsfrance · 3 months
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1940 : Depuis l’#Angleterre, le #GénéralDeGaulle lance la pelle du #18juin, évènement qui fera peu de vagues sur le moment
L'article sur bit.ly/3BpAdZO
Abonnez-vous pour recevoir d'autres fucknews
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detournementsmineurs · 4 months
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Monument souvenir au tout dernier discours de Charles de Gaulle en tant que Chef d'Etat prononcé à Quimper (1969), Bretagne, France, mai 2024.
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francebonapartiste · 6 months
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Les réseaux de résistance et les différents maquis
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Dans le cadre de la commémoration du 80ème anniversaire des débarquements, notre association historique a le privilège d’organiser une série d’entretiens vidéos avec Michel Schepers, ancien professeur d’histoire-géographie à l’établissement scolaire Notre-Dame de France à Paris 13ème.
La première vidéo de cette série fascinante d’entretiens sera consacrée aux réseaux de résistance et aux différents maquis qui ont joué un rôle crucial pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
Michel Schepers, avec sa profonde connaissance historique et son expérience dans le domaine militaire, nous guidera à travers une présentation de ces réseaux de résistance. Il explorera les différentes régions de la France où les maquis ont opéré, mettant en lumière leurs contributions héroïques et leur impact sur le cours de l’histoire.
L’entretien offrira des perspectives uniques et des précisions captivantes, enrichies par les connaissances de Michel Schepers, qui apportera une dimension unique à cette période cruciale de notre histoire.
Nous vous invitons à vous joindre à nous pour cette première vidéo, qui constituera le point de départ d’une série d’événements commémoratifs à ne pas manquer.
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kevlo75 · 2 years
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Lombard Street, historic headquarters of the "Free French Banking" founded in London by General de Gaulle and René Pleven, finance minister of Free France. The general's famous speech was recorded at the London offices of Cartier. #freefrenchbanking #degaulle #afd #renépleven #london (à Lombard Street, London EC4Y) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp1zFnNIecf/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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dreamofstarlight · 4 months
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Jacqueline Kennedy is greeted by President Charles DeGaulle of France at the Élysée Palace in Paris - May 31, 1961
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eretzyisrael · 6 months
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by NORMAN J.W. GODA
All of this made perfect sense to French Trotskyists and Maoists. Pro-Palestinian anti-Zionist organizations formed in France after the Six-Day War. They included university students who styled themselves as revolutionaries. Using the language of anti-colonialism still fresh from France’s ill-fated attempt to retain Algeria, these organizations also borrowed the legacy of the French Resistance, neatly turning the Israelis into the Nazis. French keffiyeh-wearing Communists complained of Jewish press control. “Palestine solidarity” events included distribution of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. As Jewish writer Gérard Rosenthal put it in early 1970, “The problem of Israel is becoming a national problem.” Israel’s seasoned ambassador Asher Ben-Natan, who arrived in Paris in 1970, noted that relations with France had hit difficulties because “there exists also in France elements that have suddenly adopted anti-Israel attitudes.”
How did France’s Jews respond? By asserting their Jewishness without sacrificing their claim to France’s promise of universal dignity. “The world,” said Meïr Waintrater, the editor of the Jewish monthly L’Arche, in April 1970, “only likes dead Jews. . . . It is impossible today to open a newspaper without finding an article [that] gives Jews advice — which curiously resembles orders — on how to be Jewish or how to be French.” Later, in 1977, filmmaker Claude Lanzmann asked, “Why must the Jews feel obligated after Auschwitz to speak in [polite] language? To prove that they are really French? This language . . . is from the time of Dreyfus! It is the language [from] before the creation of Israel! If we are to protest, I ask that we do so as Jews!”
The chief vehicle of the French-Jewish campaign was the International League against Racism and Antisemitism (LICRA), formed in 1927 in reaction to the dreadful treatment of Jews in Eastern Europe after World War I. After World War II, LICRA countered racism as well, monitoring everything from apartheid in South Africa to the civil rights movement in the United States to the war in Vietnam to the treatment of Arab workers in France. For French Jews, anti-antisemitism and the fight against racism were both part of the struggle for human dignity. LICRA saw no contradiction between opposing racism and advocating the safety of the State of Israel. If the world was divided, it was not between the oppressors and the oppressed. It was divided into those whose rights to safety were respected and those whose rights were not.
LICRA altered its view on de Gaulle. He was still the man who, on June 18, 1940, had called for resistance to the Germans in the name of the universalism France represented. As LICRA president and former Gaullist intelligence officer Jean Pierre-Bloch put it, “We will never forget.” But Pierre-Bloch also noted publicly that de Gaulle “is betraying the Franco-Israeli friendship, not to [help] the Arab people, but to support the potentates who rule these people to their great detriment.” Understanding that the French policy encouraged Arab extremists to hold out for Israel’s destruction rather than work for peace, LICRA also led demonstrations of Jews and non-Jews in Paris and other cities against what Pierre-Bloch called “the scandalous embargo.” Meanwhile LICRA called for a Palestinian state — but without the PLO, whose terror operations disqualified it from any human-rights struggle.
LICRA’s writers, Jews and non-Jews, also tried to expose the antisemitic nature of anti-Zionism in their newspaper Le Droit de vivre. Didier Aubourg, who worked for Judeo-Christian amity in France, wrote in March 1970, “Of all the forces that threaten Israel, the Arab armies are far from the most fearsome. The most relentless enemy . . . is indeed antisemitism, the old antisemitism that no longer dares to say its name, but which, rebaptized as anti-Zionism, has never lost its murderous virulence.” Former member of the Resistance, writer, and curator Jean Cassou was more direct. Anti-Zionism, he said, was “a wonderful invention,” because it “allows everyone to be an antisemite in good conscience from now on.”
As for the PLO’s mask of humanism and progressivism, philosopher Anne Matalon noted in the spring of 1968 that “one would be justified in thinking” that the PLO “would recognize . . . the Israeli people.” Instead, the PLO resembled “a capricious child or psychopath” who insisted that history could be turned back. Could the PLO really pose as revolutionary? Jacques Givet, whose family was murdered in Auschwitz and who narrowly escaped death by jumping from a deportation train, said no. “Any apology for al-Fatah, however veiled,” he wrote in March 1969, referring to the PLO’s main group, “is by necessity an apology for genocide.” Unlike the anti-colonial terror in Algiers, Givet argued, “Free Palestine” was little more than a slogan wrapped in pseudo-revolutionary imagery to justify Israel’s destruction and the killing of Jews. François Musard, a member of the Jewish Resistance, identified Palestinian terror as “defiance of the most elementary rules of civilization.” It “strikes blindly in theaters, in markets, among innocent populations where their victims are more often women and children. It wants nothing more than ‘to kill a Jew.’”
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brooklynnsart · 3 days
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some doodles of The Girls ™
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thatscarletflycatcher · 9 months
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"All my life I have thought of France in a certain way. This is inspired by sentiment as much as by reason. The emotional side of me tends to imagine France, like the princess in the fairy stories or the Madonna in the frescoes, as dedicated to an exalted and exceptional destiny... I was convinced that France would have to go through gigantic trials, that the interest of life consisted in one day rendering her some signal service, and that I would have the occasion to do so."
- From the opening of Memoirs of War: The Call to honor by Charles DeGaulle
I'm getting this as a Christmas present and I'm seeing I'm in for a treat
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prussianmemes · 2 years
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finished an eight thousand word essay on french society and how it dealt with the legacy of the vichy regime and realized nobody can make up their damn mind and most problems can be traced back to de gaulle.
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French Resistance Operative André Jarrot During World War II
Subscriber Content Add content here that will only be visible to your subscribers. Payment On August 10/11, 1944, BCRA agent André Jarrot parachutes into German-occupied France from a USAAF B-24 with American stores for the Maquis in an SOE supported mission. André Jarrot was born on 13 December 1909 in Lux (Saône-et-Loire), into a Burgundian family of peasant origin. In 1927, after studying…
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Street Art "L'Angleterre" par l'artiste Banksy dans les rues de Saint-Malo, Bretagne, septembre 2023.
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whatzitoyuh · 2 months
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The worst part of really liking airplanes and flying is how much airports fucking blow.
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shapelytimber · 17 days
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:)) heyy remember the french snap election ? You know, the one where the left won miraculously due to an historic number of people showing up to vote ? Well, *two fucking months* after the elections, after rejecting dozens of left candidates for prime minister, after consulting with former french presidents and Marine le Pen ? the far right presidential candidate of the last 20 years, to help him choose (wouldn't it be nice if there was a system where every french person could put the name of candidates they want, and we just yk pick the most popular ? Just an idea)........
Our prime minister is fucking Michel Barnier.
A right wing (with far right sympathies, which in french politics is absolutely ludicrous. Wdym you're a DeGaule simp but still like Nazis ?? Was your only problem with them that they were german ???), who voted against the decriminalization of homosexuality, against same sex mariage in 2012, and rn his favorite subject is immigrations (read islamophobia) :)))))
Ig we just loose, no matter what.
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sigynpenniman · 2 months
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AIRPORT TIERLIST OF AIRPORTS I’VE BEEN THROUGH FROM SOMEONE WHO FUCKING LOVES AIRPORTS
S TIER:
- MCO Orlando. My love my queen. Platonic ideal of airports. All the other airports wanna be her.
- MSY New Orleans - I have only seen your beautiful face once but your vibes were just impeccable. I miss you beautiful
A TIER:
- LHR London Heathrow - you’re so chill and sweet to be such a major airport. Weirdly calming somehow. Sterile, but the big boy of London airports. When you’re here you’re in London. Smells like joy.
- CDG Charles DeGaulle Paris. Dripping in stunning retro futurism and has a Concorde on stands by the runway. We love her
- DCA Ronald Reagan Washington DC. So pretty. So clean. So easy to navigate. Prevented from S tier status by being one long skinny thing with no way to get quickly across it.
B TIER:
- DEN Denver Colorado. Architecture for the gods but somehow the vibes are off. I’d fly through you again happily but I don’t feel especially warm when I think of you.
- FLL Fort Lauderdale - Hollywood. You’re permanently attached to very warm memories for me because of the trip I took from you but you’re just kind of there. Vibes are off. Meh.
- ORD Chicago O’hare. Aesthetic perfection but weirdly stressful. While I had a great time on this trip I do not think warmly of the airport other than the rainbow lighting. Jules got yelled at here. -10 points.
- CLE Cleveland Ohio. Another airport that is home of warm memories due to loved ones but just really not the vibe as an airport.
C TIER:
- LGW London Gatwick. I don’t like you for no reason. Like a disappointment, you’re in London but not at Heathrow for some reason.
- PHL Philadelphia. Again, weird aimless dislike. I cannot justify.
- BNA Nashville. Meh. Fine, which may be the worst insult I can lob at an airport.
D TIER:
- LGA New York LaGaurdia. Fuck you and your tiny spirit terminal in the middle of nowhere and your hard to access rental cars and your poor road signage that sent me round and round on the New York interstate in my rented Corolla. The bigger terminals are pretty though, and anyway. New York City!
E TIER:
JAX Jacksonville. Ew.
F TIER:
BOS Boston Logan International Airport. I loathe you. Less busy numerically than ATL and yet somehow even more spread out. Signage is bad. Directions unclear. Nothing makes sense in this alternate reality. Labyrinthine building designed by the god Hades. Never again would be too soon.
UNTIERABLE:
ATL - Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta. The biggest and busiest airport in the world. When you buy a ticket on Delta a box pops up that says “by buying this ticket you agree to see the inside of Hartsfield Jackson Airport.” Not actually a real place, but a floating parallel dimensional space you enter when you walk through the doors. When you get off the Plane Train at terminal D a sign to the left points down a hallway and says “Walk to Terminal E. Time: 45 minutes.” Bigger than many cities and some European principalities. And sometimes you’ll be forced to run clear across it when your gate gets changed. Send every domestic flight that goes near it and many that don’t through it for a completely unnecessary 45 minute layover and sautée until golden brown to birth this unholy god of a space outside all time. They have CPR training machines. They have bathrooms too rarely. They have a whole other airport underneath for international transfers. Don’t die before you see it. Everyone should, at least once. 🎶Welcome Aboard the Plane Train!🎶 next stop: the 4th circle of hell. Walk to purgatory: 45 minutes. Moving sidewalk out of order.
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robert-hadley · 1 year
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Henri Cartier Bresson - Listening to DeGaulle, France, 1963.
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