Women and words

by Tyna Geronimi

Joséphine Baker

(French singer, dancer, actress, revue leader and resistance fighter) 
Born on 3 June 1906 in Saint-Louis and died on 12 April 1975 in Paris.

Joséphine Baker

Joséphine Baker

and the love of North Africa

French version

The management of Pouvoir Magazine is pleased to present the two works below and

warmly thanks Rebecca Moses for making them available.

(Rebecca Moses is represented by Ralph Pucci international).

 

Visit the website of Rebecca Moses

The most French of black icons, an exceptional woman renowned for her bravery and tireless dedication, who was hallowed in the Pantheon just two years ago, the incredible American-born Josephine Baker has been part of my life for a very long time. It was natural for me to talk about her from a different angle, or at least one that was closer to my personal imagination. 

 

The little girl from Saint-Louis, who rose from poverty with dignity, arrived in France at the last minute; the New York star of the troupe that was due to perform in Paris had refused to leave America at the last minute. Naturally, Joséphine, her understudy, replaced her, ensuring her triumph at the première of La Revue Nègre at the Théâtre des Champs Élysées in 1925.

 

Joséphine had seized her chance.

Joséphine Baker animates me !

This artist came into my life when I arrived in France with my parents from North Africa, Tunisia to be precise. My father and mother, French and Italian natives of Tunisia, had finally decided to move to the metropolis and benefit from French modernity, the magic box, television. It was then that I discovered, totally captivated, two fascinating programmes: Christmas with French-speaking children from the other side of the world, in Quebec and Louisiana. But also Christmas in an extraordinary family, that of the Arc en ciel tribe, of the most extravagant mother and the glittering diva of the music-hall, Josephine Baker. These vivid memories were accompanied by music, in particular jazz with Sidney Bechet and Louis Armstrong, but also songwriters and troubadour poets like Félix Leclerc. There's no doubt that the impact of television was felt by every French family from the 1960s onwards. In my case, they forged a particular attraction to Elsewhere and tolerance of difference. I loved music-hall and even as a child I liked the star Josephine Baker. Jazz never left me. Twenty-five years later, it was no coincidence that I went to Quebec and Louisiana to do a doctorate on French America.

 

In the meantime, a scandal had befallen the Arc en ciel tribe,
Joséphine Baker was ruined and left homeless with her children,
to the point where she had to return to the stage at the age of sixty.

 

I still remember a pathetic programme one Sunday where she explained their situation with great dignity. I was a teenager and very shocked that this admirable family could be put out on the street and that this lady of a certain age would be obliged to return to the stage to support her family. Even now I tell myself that the world is cruel. She died. Because yes, the extreme physical effort and the enormous stress of a catastrophic financial situation to manage alone with twelve children to support, totally exhausted her.

 

This unforgettable woman was more than a showgirl, more than a big-hearted mother, she was a woman of great courage and conviction, a humble heroine, so much so that I only learned about her in 2000.  At a women's group meeting in Paris, one of her children came to give us an account of Josephine Baker's life and told us about her role as a member of the Resistance during the war. That's how I came to understand that she had enlisted to liberate France, which she loved more than anything else. This France included North Africa. I personally had to return to live in Tunisia, where I was born, to better understand the system of colonial France and to learn that Josephine Baker had been there several times. It was in reading her memoirs that I discovered her deep love and intimate knowledge of the Maghreb, its culture and religion.

Joséphine Baker animates me  

Théâtre municipal de Tunis

Minaret et patio de la mosquée Zitouna

au centre de la Médina de Tunis.

Tunis, musée du Bardo, salle de Virgile

Crédit photo : Wikipédia licence CC BY-SA 4.0

Tunis 

She discovered Tunis on her first tour in 1925, when she described it as "a wonderful oasis of colour and light", and later replied: "Tunis is a city with heart. The people are welcoming and warm, and they love life. I spent some unforgettable moments in this city. During her second stay, she visited Tunisia and enjoyed the country during the filming of Princesse Tam-tam, an international film in which she starred. She became interested in the culture and history of Tunisia, particularly its Roman history, while filming in the archaeological ruins of Dougga. She said in an interview:

 

"Tunisia is a country rich in history and culture.
It's a country that has a lot to offer visitors."

 

A true ambassador. Joséphine was a regular visitor to Tunisia from 1926 to 1936, on a private trip thanks to her manager and husband, Pépito Abatino. The fact is that this fake Sicilian Count had emigrated to Tunis before landing in Paris. His reputation as a formidable businessman was convincing, as Joséphine's career flourished during these years. Apparently, the "Comte de Calatafimi" was a friend of all the Parisian impresarios, including Paul Derval, the director of the Folies Bergère. And it was here, thanks to Pepito, that Joséphine made her debut in the famous revue "La Folie du Jour".

 

It was through him that she would become the unforgettable singer of the hit of the day, "J'ai deux amours", at the Casino de Paris. But the Tunisian adventure was cut short by Pepito's death from cancer at the age of 38 in 1936. However, she returned in 1943 during her tour of North Africa in support of the Allied troops. When she performed in Tunis at the municipal theatre, received with great pomp by the Tunisian authorities, she was hailed as a heroine. She said: 

 

"I was deeply touched
by the kindness and hospitality of the Tunisians.
They opened their hearts to the Allied soldiers,
and did everything they could to help us.

 

Marrakech , Artisan

Photo : Pixabay

Joséphine Baker wearing a banana belt

1926 (photo de Waléry).

Maroc, Ksar d'Aït-Ben-Haddou

Marrakech

 

Nowadays, since 2021, and the many articles that have re-established the facts of resistance of the now artist in the Pantheon, we know that Joséphine, through her marriage to a rich French industrialist in 1937, had become a French citizen. When France was defeated and the Germans arrived in Paris, the artist's patriotism was publicly expressed when she refused to sing and dance for the German invaders.  She was divorced and decided to leave metropolitan France, which had collaborated with Vichy, and move to the Kingdom of Morocco. It was in Morocco, and in Marrakech in particular, that she became truly attached to Muslim culture. Her words are unmistakable, her descriptions faithful and sincere. She even kept many of her friends in the Cherifian kingdom through this strong, intimate contact. 
In her memoirs, we can understand the oriental lifestyle she adopted in Marrakech. Here is her description of her home:

 

"First of all, I lived in the Mamounia hotel. It's famous in the Bab Djedid district. Then I wanted my own house to live like the Arabs. I found one in the Medina, near the Koutoubia, which raises its three golden balls above the city terraces. It was at the end of a narrow, lost cul-de-sac. You knock three times on the low door with the hammer. And my servant comes to open it for you. He has a white gandourah, like his long beard. He greets you by putting his big, thin, yellow hand over his heart. At the end of the dark vestibule, whose blue mosaic covering keeps the light cool, you see another small, low door. Behind it is the Garden of Allah. Around the fountain where the birds come to drink, there are orange trees that always have oranges. And columns of fine marble like young girls and thick shadows. Now you can come in wherever you like. All the doors open onto the patio like a block of light reaching up to the sky. All you have to do is lift a curtain at random from the arcades."


She also writes: "I discovered a new world, a world of beauty and spirituality. I was fascinated by Muslim culture, by its art, music and dance. She continues: "Marrakech is a magical city, a city with a long memory. It has seen centuries of civilisations pass through it, and it has kept their imprint". As for the Moroccans, she says they "are a welcoming and generous people. They made me feel at home. 
Personally, I felt carried away by her memories, particularly her unequivocal descriptions of Marrakech in the 1940s:

 

"It's so crowded in the Place Djemaa El F'na. The ragged misery and the flea market. Butcher's stalls, black with flies... Bread sellers squatting side by side. A meeting place for the curious, photographers, snake charmers and storytellers. They swarm in the dust. Singing in the sun. Haggling. Shouting. Screaming. It smells of fried food, cinnamon and mint, spices, the cooking of sorcerers and healers, herbs, drugs, drying bird heads and rotting monkey legs.

 

When you read her memories of the desert she walked through during the war, you realise how intensely she experienced the land of Africa. Joséphine Baker had not only a heart, but also a genuine spirituality. She believed in God and the beauty of the Universe. She was tolerant and very ecumenical. She even prayed in her dressing room before shows. In the desert, during the war, this woman of action often had to pray under the stars.


"And we drank from the little streams of the oases.
And in the evening the stars were as big as tears."

 

Work seen at the 120th edition of the "Salon d'automne".
(International Contemporary Art Fair)
depicting the unforgettable Josephine Baker,
always a great source of inspiration.

Photo : S.Theri

Alger , Photo :  Pixabay

Alger

And Algeria, you ask? 

 

Algiers first contact, on 1 December 1931 for a tour organised by Pepito. Joséphine Baker stayed at the Hôtel Saint-Georges, a Moorish palace. The very next day, she triumphed at the Majestic in the Bab el-Oued district, where, accompanied by her orchestra of black musicians, she gave a concert, singing "J'ai deux amours" among other songs. Algiers seduced her and in 1936 she even sang a new hit, "Nuit d'Alger".

 

In January 41, she returned, mainly as an "honourable correspondent" for French counter-espionage. This time she stayed at the Hotel Aletti. She worked under Jacques Aptey, head of military counter-espionage in Paris, who had recruited her in 1939, before joining the Resistance in London in 1940. She could never forget Algiers, because it was there in October 1943, when the star was giving a gala at the Opéra, that she met her idol, General de Gaulle, the man she had decided to follow after his appeal on 18 June. It was during the interval that she received a small gold Cross of Lorraine from General de Gaulle, leader of Free France, in the VIP box. She was overwhelmed. Later, in the midst of the Algerian war, which she would not comment on, she took action by adopting two orphans: a boy of Kabyle origin and a girl of pieds-noirs parents. Brahim and Marianne. They became part of the Arc en Ciel Tribe and its twelve children. 
 
It was at the Château des Milandes that she tried to realise her grand vision of a society free of racism and prejudice, of a welcoming constellation with her twelve children, all adopted, with the idea of making emulators too. It seems that she was not understood in her time. That's the fate of pioneers. She was thrown out of Les Milandes. Grace Kelly was the one who reached out to her and took in the Tribe. Her friend, the Princess of Monaco, was American. In 2021, justice was done to her by the France she had loved so much.


 Joséphine Baker was a visionary who understood the importance of understanding and cooperation between cultures. She was a fervent advocate of peace and fraternity, and believed that the Muslim world could play an important role in building a better world.


"The day will surely come when colour will mean nothing more than skin tone, when religion will be seen only as a means of speaking to one's soul; when the places of birth have the weight of a throw of the dice and all men are born free, when understanding begets love and brotherhood."


 It will be many years before his dream comes true, as the 21st century seems to have taken a different path.