Armistice Day
Nov. 11th, 2005 08:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I learnt on television today that there were only 6 "Poilus" left in France and I wondered how many World War I veterans were still alive in other countries...
I also wonder if that "Great War" is still taught in details in other countries. It seems that the 2nd World War and its genocide have taken such a room in our folk memory...and in the the way we teach History these days.
Who still remembers the horror that 14-18 war was? Or rather who, among young people, really knows about it nowadays? Who will?
Because there's a big difference between History and "Memory Duty" or commemoration. I know it's a commemorative day, but as a Historian I wish we'd stop get everything mixed up. I have nothing against commemorative events. They are a political ritual and it's important for the res publica to have such moments.
But History is another matter. It isn't about civics, nor morality nor about the society's needs nor about the political norm. It's a job for Historians, not for politicians who want to dig in to revel in politically correct or please certain lobbies (like with that outrageous law about teaching colonization by emphazing the "good sides" of it!). And nowadays politicians and lobbies are trying to interfer more and more with teaching, telling us what we should teach as a matter of priority and the way we should do it. It goes against the principles of laïcité as well as the religious signs we ban inside of school. It's kinda like what is happening in certain American schools about biology courses and the whole Intelligent Design vs Evolution.
It's the kind of thing you find in dictatures and totalitarian States. Something is going on, and I don't like it. I'm going to be very not politically correct and I might shock some people but I'm really fed up with all the Shoah stuff I've been receiving in my teacher box, almost every week, for a few years. Stop covering me with that Gospel and let me do History damnit (and no, don't worry I am not a revisionist at all) !
Sorry for the digression but my point was that I have the feeling that War World I is going to be less and less known in the future because of some people's priorities. Yet it's a very interesting matter.
At least some film makers evoke it like in "La Chambre Des Officiers" a few years ago or Genet and his "Un Long Dimanche de Fiançailles". But artists and films won't replace History. They should not.
Anyway I may go see "Joyeux Noël" tomorrow. It's a movie about Christmas 1914, when German soldiers did that incredible thing: they decided to fraternize with the ennemy, left their trench and shared that night with French/Scottish soldiers. And it's a real event. It happened despite all the propaganda and the horror that were the first months of that war (more soldiers got killed during those months than during the 4 following years).
But of course historical accuracy in no way guarantees that the film will be a good one. I'm afraid it's gonna be a bit too tears-jerking and over the top. Sometimes when directors aim at moving people they overdo.