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Any American with even a slight familiarity with Paris knows
about Josephine Baker, the black swivel-hipped cabaret entertainer
who shunned racism in America, vaulted to stardom here in 1925,
and stayed on to become one of France's most adored 20th century
icons.
But what about William Wells Brown, the 19th-century former slave
turned abolitionist who once expressed awe that he could pray
next to whites at La Madeleine church, or that some tipped their
hat to him on Paris streets?
Both historical figures feature high in Black Paris Tours, offering
a glimpse of the mutual love affair between black Americans and
the City of Light.
Tour guide Ricki Stevenson let me tag along as she escorted four
black tourists from Texas, who braved the weak U.S. dollar and
a chilly and wet winter day as part of a birthday-celebration
getaway.
They chose the full-day option, $129 per person for a trek zigzagging
through offbeat areas like the Parc Monceau, where poet Langston
Hughes once lived in maid's chambers, or a bustling, working-class
area that Stevenson dubs "Little Africa."
Stevenson, an Oklahoma native and former TV journalist, has more
than enough material to work with: Even after an information-packed
tour lasting nine hours, I couldn't help thinking we had only
scratched the surface.
The tour was especially eye-opening in France, where minorities
from the substantial black and North African communities, often
with origins in former French colonies, are not quantified in
the census. The state considers everyone simply French, in its
bid to be officially colorblind and stem discrimination. In practice,
though, North African immigrants and their children do complain
of discrimination, and riots broke out in immigrant areas in 2005.
American blacks in France, though, are a category unto themselves.
"In many ways, African-Americans came to France as a sort
of privileged minority, a kind of model minority, if you will
— a group that benefited not only from French fascination
with blackness, but a French fascination about Americanness,"
said Tyler Stovall, a history professor of the University of California,
Berkeley. "Jazz comes to France at roughly the same time
as Hollywood movies; both are embraced enthusiastically."
Baker, who dazzled Paris audiences with her skimpy outfits and
banana skirts, gets high billing in this tour. But so do jazz
greats like Sidney Bechet, a longtime Paris resident, and the
all-black 369th Regiment of World War I best known as the Harlem
Hellfighters.
Paris tours about black history have come and gone, but Stevenson's
has unusual lasting power, and is now in its ninth year.
This is informal, personal-touch tourism: Don't look for a heated
tour bus or lunch included. Like everyday Parisians, you get around
by Metro or public bus which is better for sightseeing. Forget
the Louvre or the Eiffel Tower.
After meeting at a bakery on the Champs-Elysees, we crisscrossed
the Right Bank, hitting sites unlikely to be seen in standard
tour guidebooks, like an Alexandre Dumas statue (his mother was
Haitian), a cabaret hall where Baker was the main attraction,
and an ornate hotel where W.E.B. Du Bois hosted the Pan African
Congress in 1919.
Stevenson dressed up the visit with props, like a reproduction
lithograph of Brown, and a jazz recording. She pointed out the
architectural similarities of Paris and Washington, D.C., to better
translate France for her guests.
Stevenson briefed her charges with advice on how not to ruffle
Parisians — like always saying "Bonjour" to shop
personnel, and not attributing slow restaurant service to racism
but to the one-size-fits-all aloofness of many Paris waiters.
"The French don't do bacon and eggs," she warned her
guests.
"Yeah, we found out," said Greta Burton, 52, with a
comic groan. The Dallas realtor arranged their tour day as part
of a getaway in France for the 60th birthday of friend Dora (French
nickname: "Marie-Claire") Morris — along with
her daughters, Angela Morris and Sonja Baty.
The first stop was the Arc de Triomphe, where the encyclopedic
Stevenson said former American slaves who made it to France in
the 19th century came to sense freedom beyond the reach of bounty
hunters.
"For the first time, you're not looking over your shoulder,
going, 'Are they after me? Are they going to catch me?'"
said Stevenson. "There were laws that protected the African-Americans
who came here."
Stevenson cited unofficial figures indicating that up to 50,000
free blacks came here from Louisiana in the decades after Napoleon
sold the territory to the United States in 1803, fearing greater
restrictions under the new authorities.
The best-known wave of black Americans to France came during
World War I, when some 200,000 were brought over to fight.
"Ninety percent of these soldiers were from the South, and
the idea that they could actually talk to white women without
immediately being lynched was a revelation to them," said
Stovall, author of "Paris Noir: African-Americans in the
City of Light," by phone.
"They wrote letters back home... that were often published
in the black press," he said. "That helped create this
idea of France as this paradise of racial tolerance."
After the war, many black musicians migrated to feed France's
infatuation with jazz.
She packs the tour with a dose of African pride: Africans explored
France before it was a country; French farmers learned skills
in animal husbandry and ironmaking from Africans; Napoleon admired
Hannibal, the North African general of Rome-fighting fame in antiquity,
she said. She gave credence to the theory that the first model
for the French-designed Statue of Liberty was a freed slave —
an assertion that The AP could not confirm.
The Paris tourism office had little advice about such ethnically
oriented, boutique tourism, other than to mention a tour of sites
of interest to Indian visitors. Last year, the Arab World Institute
in Paris began hosting a walking tour, but it's on hold until
springtime.
France's effort to ignore racial differences hasn't succeeded
in abolishing racism. Even the French anti-discrimination agency
acknowledges that many young blacks and Arabs today struggle for
acceptance or land jobs.
The main racism that American blacks may have felt here was of
the imported variety, brought by American whites. Some Paris restaurants
and cafes set up "white-only" and "black only"
sections in the late 1920s at the behest of white American patrons,
Stovall said.
Undaunted by being crammed next to me on a rush-hour Paris subway,
Dora Morris said she liked the tour's slice-of-life feeling.
"Most tours don't put you into actual life ... We were seeing
things, we were learning historic things, but we're part of the
mainstream," said Morris, a retired elementary school teacher.
"You want to see how people really live."
For her daughters, it was the learning experience that counted.
"These are things you read about in the history books ...
Ricki's able to fill in some gaps," said Baty, a 40-year-old
software consultant. "I honestly had no idea that so many
African-Americans were involved in the history of France."
Source: Associated Press
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