In
Honor Of The 95th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Communist International-Take
Three –A Daughter of The Communards?
Claudette Longuet idolized her grandfather, her
maternal grandfather, Louis Paret, called the Lyonese Jaures by his comrades in
the Socialist Party and by others as well not attuned to his political perspectives
by respectful of the power of his words nevertheless, an honorific
well-deserved for his emulation of the internationally famous French socialist
orator, Jean Jaures, who had been villainously assassinated just before the
war. Claudette had reason to idolize Papa Paret for his was a gentle man toward
his several grandchildren and so had a built-in fan club of sorts before he
even left the comfortable confines of his townhouse on the edges of downtown
Lyon.
More importantly Claudette had idolized him for his
political past, his proud working class and socialist political past. As a mere
boy he had fought on the barricades during the Paris Commune, a touchstone for
all those who survived the bloody massacre reprisals of the Theirs government
carried out by the sadistic General Gallifit. He just barely missed being
transported. Fortunately no “snitch” could place him on the barricades,
although the Theirs government was not always so choosey about such things when
they had their killing habits on. He had defended the poor Jewish soldier
Dreyfus when Emile Zola screamed for his release. He had opposed Alexander Millerand,
an avowed socialist, in joining the murderous bourgeois government when he took
that step. He tirelessly campaigned against war, signed all the national and
international petitions to prevent that occurrence, and attended all the
conferences too. Although he himself was no Marxist, his socialism ran to more
mystical and philosophical trends, he welcomed the Russian revolution of 1905
with open arms. So, yes, Claudette, as she grew to young womanhood and began
her own search for social and political meaning, understandable took her cues
from her Papa. Moreover before the war she spent many hours in his company at
the local socialist club doing the “this and that” to spread the socialist faith
around and about Lyons.
Then the war came, that dreaded awful August 1914
when the guns of war howled into the night and her grandfather changed, almost
chameleon-like. From a fervent anti-warrior he turned overnight into a paragon
of defense of French culture, French
bourgeois culture, as he would have previously said against, against, the Hun,
the Boche, the, the, whatever foul word he could use to denigrate the Germans,
all of them. He stood in the central square in Lyon and preached, preached the
duty of every eligible young Frenchman to defend the republic to the death, no
questions asked. And since he had that Jaures-like quality those young boys
listened and sadly went off to war, many to never return. For a while he also had
Claudette with him, for the first couple of years when he, they uttered not one
anti-war word, not one. But after about two years, after some awful battles
fought on French soil, some awful battles that were just stacking up the
corpses without let-up, she started to listen to that younger Papa voice, the
voice that thrilled her young girl-hood, and silently began to oppose the war,
to oppose her grandfather who had not changed his opinion one iota throughout the
carnage.
Claudette kept his silence until the February
revolution in Russia in 1917 when it seemed like peace might be at hand. He
grandfather cursed the Russians whenever there was talk that they might
withdraw from the war but she saw that their withdrawal might stop the war on
all fronts. Mainly she was tired of seeing the weekly casualty lists and all
the women, young and old, in black, always black. Then in November or maybe
December 1917 she heard, heard from her new beau (a beau a little younger than
her, almost just a boy, since the men her age were either at the fronts or down
in the ground) who had been agitating for an end to the war (and getting hell
for it from the local government, and her grandfather) that the Russians under
the Bolsheviks had withdrawn from the war. Things were sketchy, very sketchy
with the wartime censorship on but that is what she heard from him. She talked
to, or tried to talk to her grandfather about it, but he would not hear of the
damn Bolshevik rabble.
Papa Paret moreover said when peace came, and it
would come, with or without the damn Russians, since the entry of the American
would take the final stuffing out of the Germans, then everybody could go back
to arguing against war and French and German workers could unite again under
the banner of the Socialist International and maybe really end war for good.
And the war did end, and the various socialists who had just supported the
massive blood-letting in Europe and elsewhere started talking of brotherhood
once again and of putting that old peacetime International back together.
Claudette though, now more under the spell of that feisty boyfriend, was not
sure that grandfather had it right. And in the summer of 1919 when she heard
(via that same boyfriend who had already joined the French Communist Party, or
really the embryo of that party) that the Bolsheviks had convened a conference
to form a new International, a Third International, to really fight against war
and fight for socialism she was more conflicted. See she really did idolize
Papa and so she would wait and see…
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