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We carry you a particular present marking 60 years for the reason that finish of the conflict in Algeria and the top of greater than 130 years of French colonisation. Filmmaker and French-Algerian journalist Dorothée Myriam Kellou speaks to Eve Jackson about her award-winning movie “In Mansourah, You Separated Us”. The documentary sheds gentle on a largely silenced, but important a part of Algerian-French colonial historical past.
Throughout the Algerian Conflict of Independence, Mansourah was certainly one of hundreds of communities the colonial French rulers became resettlement camps. These pressured removals affected practically half the agricultural Algerian inhabitants, and on the finish of the conflict, greater than two million folks had been dispersed between two thousand “regroupement camps” created by the French military. The deeply shifting documentary sees the director take her father, Malek, again to Mansourah – a village he fled as a 10-year-old boy in 1960. It unravels her father’s story but in addition the reminiscences of these displaced in addition to the inhabitants who noticed their village flip right into a camp they may not escape from.
We additionally carry you a particular report from Renaud Lefort and Emerald Maxwell on two artists who’ve been reflecting on one of many darkest pages of France’s colonial historical past. In October 1961, round 30,000 Algerians took to the streets of Paris in a peaceable protest towards a curfew. That day is now known as the Paris massacre of 1961. It is estimated that 200 folks had been killed by the police, with some even thrown into the River Seine.