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erika dreifus
 

camus at combat


Camus at Combat: Writing 1944-47. Albert Camus. Edited and annotated by Jacqueline Lévi-Valensi. Translated by Arthur Goldhammer. With an Introduction by David Carroll. Princeton University Press, 2006. $29.95. 334 pp.

 

Albert Camus entered my life in 1986, when I was a high school junior assigned to read The Stranger in French IV class. As a college sophomore studying Modern European History and Literature a few years later I read The Plague. And our relationship could have ended there. That’s about as much Camus as most Americans will ever read.

But Camus, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957 (he was then 43 years old) and died in an automobile crash three years later, was, as I learned during my junior spring semester in Paris, much more than a mere novelist. He was a journalist, too.

And he was a journalist in difficult times, including the moment of German occupation. In fact, it was en pleine occupation that Camus became editor-in-chief of Combat, a Resistance newspaper published clandestinely and irregularly until the liberation in the summer of 1944. This translation of Camus at Combat, which was originally produced in France in 2002, collects 165 of his Combat editorials and articles, some attributed to him from Combat’s clandestine phase, but most dating from the post-liberation and early postwar period.

It’s a tremendous book. And it’s significant not only for those, like me, with longstanding intellectual and emotional attachments to the author and the original texts (that junior spring I chose the postwar purges of French writers and journalists as my senior honors thesis topic; before I left France that summer I spent many hours in the French National Library, reading Camus’ many Combat editorials on the subject on microfilm), but for anyone interested in history, politics, or journalism.

In an editorial published on September 1, 1944, for example, Camus elaborated on his concept of the journalist: “He is first of all a person who is supposed to have ideas .… He is also a person who every day takes it upon himself to inform the public about the events of the day before. In short, he is a historian of the moment, and truth must be his primary concern.”

But for both historians and journalists “truth” can be complicated—and disturbing. As David Carroll notes in his superb introduction to this English edition, in these Combat pieces Camus elucidated and critiqued “three major failures of French democracy in the immediate postwar period”:

The first failure, which occurred immediately after the Liberation, resulted from the inability of the French to deal effectively and, more important, justly with the traitors and criminals of the war period in the purge trials (l’épuration). The second was the failure of France to recognize the injustices of colonialism and to uphold the same democratic principles in its colonies for which the Resistance had fought and which the French people demanded for themselves. The third major failure of democracy was related to the inadequacy of the free press in general, but particularly to Combat’s own inability to remain independent and thus in Camus’ terms faithful to its democratic mission. Taken together these particular failures represented a general failure in or of democracy itself.

Carroll emphasizes the resonance of Camus’ editorials for our own times, and you’d probably have to have been living under a rock lately to disagree. Of course, issues of transitional justice (think Iraq) and definitions of the rights and responsibilities of a free press continue to occupy us today. But even Carroll could not have anticipated just how profoundly Camus’ words would resound, with a specifically French accent, no less, in the months immediately preceding the book’s publication.

On October 13, 1944, Camus (who was born to a family of European origin in Algeria at a time when Algeria was officially considered a part of France, and whose last, unfinished manuscript, found in the wreckage of his car and published posthumously as The First Man in the 1990’s, presents the early part of a planned—and quite autobiographical—novel chronicling the history of the French there) wrote: “We will not find real support in our colonies until we convince them that their interests coincide with ours and that we do not have two policies: one granting justice to the people of France and the other confirming injustice toward the Empire.”

On May 18, 1945:

Far be it from me to try to formulate a definitive policy for North Africa in the space of two or three articles. This would please no one, and truth would not be served. But our Algerian policy is so distorted by prejudice and ignorance that to offer an objective account based on accurate information is already to render an important service . …

I read in a morning newspaper that 80 percent of the Arabs wished to become French citizens. In contrast, I would sum up the current state of Algerian policy by saying that, indeed, Arabs used to want to become citizens but no longer do. When you’ve hoped for something for a long time and your hopes are dashed, you avert your eyes and your erstwhile desire disappears. That is what has happened to the indigenous peoples of Algeria, and the primary responsibility for this is ours.

On May 23: “I have only one question for the French, who today know what hatred is: ‘Do you truly want to be hated by millions of people, as you have hated thousands of others? If so, let things continue on their present course in North Africa. If not, welcome these people among you and treat them as equals, using all appropriate means.’” (It should be noted that Camus did not doubt the response of the French people to his question. “But what about those in government?”)

On June 15:

It isn’t that easy to overcome prejudice and blindness .… The world today is seething with hatred. Everywhere, violence and force, massacres and riots fill the air from which we thought the worst poisons had been drained. Whatever we can do for truth—French truth and human truth—we must also do to oppose hatred. Whatever it takes must be done to bring peace to people lacerated and tormented by suffering that has gone on too long. For our part, at any rate, let us try not to add anything to Algerian bitterness.

At the very least, one senses that had he lived to a ripe old age, had he witnessed the final throes of French decolonization and the emerging history of North Africans and their descendants in metropolitan France, Camus might have offered some pretty interesting commentary on the events in the Paris “suburbs” in the autumn of 2005.

On the other hand, perhaps Camus—vilified in his lifetime for so many of his political pronouncements, including those against Algerian independence, which was not part of his vision of the solution to France’s colonial quagmire; he deplored the rebels’ guerrilla tactics which, as he famously told a group of university students in Stockholm, could threaten the safety of his own mother—might simply have said, “I told you so.” His Combat prescriptions for real shifts in attitudes and mindsets may not have offered a panacea by any means. But surely, now, we know and understand that no legal or structural changes could—or will ever—truly succeed without them.



Erika Dreifus earned undergraduate and graduate degrees from Harvard University and an M.F.A. from Queens University of Charlotte; currently she writes and teaches in Massachusetts. Her short stories and essays have appeared in Lilith, MississippiReview.com, Small Spiral Notebook, Queen's Quarterly: A Canadian Review, Vermont Literary Review, and many other publications. She edits a free monthly newsletter, "The Practicing Writer," for fictionists, poets, and nonfiction writers.