Paris Noir
  
Paris, the City of Lights, has historically been a haven for African-Americans seeking relief from the racism of America. This does not mean, however, that France is without racism. While the French people embraced African-American soldiers in both W.W.I and W.W.II, the French government, it is asserted, used their black African soldiers for canon fodder in the First World War.
The French still bristle over the loss of their North African colonies during the Civil War, and Arabs, black and white, are the targets of a virulent kind of racism throughout France.

Most French, when asked, will tell you that's it's about culture, not color. And if you embrace both the culture and the language, you're French.

African-American blacks still get the nod. At worst they are treated like most white Americans; at best like some much-beloved movie icon from a bygone era.
For myself, since I wear a hat and evoke some of the sartorial affectations associated with jazz musicians of old, I'm constantly being asked, "Jazz man?" The French have an unabashed affection for jazz and all who make it.
African-Americans are still coming, albeit for different reasons. Artists, writers, musicians, yes, but also doctors, lawyers and employees of multinational companies. The old haunts of Wright, Baldwin, Hines and cartoonist Ollie Harrington are stops on one of the many black tours of Paris. Their memory is preserved not by acolytes, but academics and black tour guides.
Michel Fabre, a noted expert on Richard Wright and the former head of the Black Studies Program at the Sorbonne, and new faces like Professor Janis Mayes of Syracuse University, and Professor Marcus C. Bruce of Bates College in Lewiston, Maine are just a few of the keepers of the eternal flames with their scholarship. Mayes teaches a 5-week summer class on Black Paris offered through Syracuse University.

The class meets at the popular Cafe de Flore on Saint Michel, either upstairs or at the sidewalk tables on the boulevard. Guest lecturers run the gamut, from writers and scholars like Julia Wright (the youngest daughter of Richard) and poet James Emanuel, to diplomats, translators and jazz musicians.
Jazz is the metaphor for the class taught by professor Mayes. Students are exposed to a variety of themes, all anchored by and filtered through the black experience in Paris: African, African-American and Caribbean. Art, music, politics and food are just a few of the subjects students can take and run with. It's a flight of fancy within an academic model. It works. Students come away with an understanding of how French culture has been and is still being shaped and influenced by the black presence.
Academics like Mayes are reaching out to the African community, forging links where they were once weak or nonexistent. Her class starts in the Louvre and ends over a plate of Jassa Poulet at one of the many African restaurants in Paris.
Bo Jangles and Percy's are two newer African-American restaurants in the city. They have eclipsed Haynes, the eatery started by the former GI who settled in Paris to explore art and film, and ended up serving up his own creations of ham hocks and collard greens. His restaurant was the favorite spot for Wright, his friends and a host of other black luminaries who followed.

Paris Noir is neither confined to the suburbs nor the few spots in a guide book. There is enough Paris to go around, A haven? Hardly. A beacon? Always!


All stories and photographs are available by contacting LSloan1420@aol.com

© Copyright 2002 Lester Sloan Media Group. All rights Reserved. No duplication of images or content allowed without written consent from Lester Sloan Media Group.

Website Design by eKelp Design and Technology