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April 7, 2020

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Virus lockdown exposes French class divisions

When bestselling French novelist Leila Slimani — the author of “The Perfect Nanny” — admitted that she felt “a little like Sleeping Beauty” contemplating the coronavirus lockdown from the comfort of her country home, she hit a very raw nerve.

Class tensions — never very far from the surface despite the fine sentiments of the French national motto “liberty, equality, fraternity” — exploded.

Parisians without second homes to flee to excoriated her on social media, with the economist Thomas Porcher, author of “Les Delaisses” (which roughly translates as “Those Left Behind,”) calling Slimani “indecent.”

With biting irony, journalist Nicolas Quenel recommended poor families read the diary of her bucolic confinement in Le Monde newspaper to “ease the tension of living in 15 square meters” for a month.

Apartments in the French capital are often tiny, with nearly a quarter of the population living in 30 square meters or less.

Nor was Slimani’s fellow novelist Diane Ducret impressed. Stuck in a two-room flat, and unable to see the sky, she said Slimani was typical of a certain caste of France’s out of touch intellectual elite “for whom the revolution doesn’t seem to have happened.”

She compared the award-winning writer to the “Marie Antoinette playing at being a farmer” in the gardens of the Palace of Versailles, and “just about as in touch with fear and anguish of the people.”

The French queen later lost her head to the Parisian poor.

In a scathing take-down of Slimani’s diary in Marianne magazine, Ducret described how her elderly neighbor had killed himself by throwing himself from the window of his tiny bedsit because the owner wanted to sell it, condemning him to the street.

The virus had “shown up our inequalities,” she said. “When it comes to a certain social class... when our precious liberty is called into question, equality becomes just an ideal.”

When France declared its lockdown three weeks ago, an estimated fifth of the population of the capital escaped to the country and the seaside, sparking a wave of resentment in the provinces. Many accused “selfish Parigots” (slang for Parisians) of spreading the virus.

An exasperated grandmother called Kouther said that she was “losing her mind” trying to keep her five grandchildren entertained in a 30-square-meter apartment.

“We are going to kill each other if this goes on any longer. They all want my phone and they are climbing the walls,” she said as the children ran around a bare square at the foot of a cluster of high-rise blocks.

Playgrounds and parks have been closed since the start of the lockdown. “You cannot keep children locked up like this. It’s wrong. They can’t play with their friends,” Kouther said. “They are fighting from morning to night.”

The children’s father is a self-employed delivery driver who has had to keep working to keep his contracts. Their mother works in a supermarket, which is also open.

One morning when Kouther had to work as a cleaner, the children were left on their own, she said.

Like Slimani, Kouther, 63, was born in Morocco, but there the similarities end.

“The rich don’t care — they wouldn’t be rich if they did,” she said.




 

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