Georges Clemenceau
September 28, 2012
On this date in 1841, French statesman and journalist Georges Clemenceau
was born in France. Clemenceau followed in his father's footsteps by
becoming a physician and a freethinker. At 16, he was briefly suspended
from school for debating Christianity with a teacher. Clemenceau began
writing for Emile Zola's newspaper, Travail,
advocating a republic and free speech, and served 63 days in jail in
1862 as a student demonstrator under the reign of Napoleon III. As a
foreign correspondent for Le Temps, he went to New York City in
1865. He met his wife-to-be teaching French at a ladies seminary in
Connecticut. Clemenceau's book, The Great God Pan (1869), described how superstitions live on under new guises. Clemenceau also translated John Stuart Mill's book, Auguste Comte and Positivism.
Returning to France, he became Mayor of Montmartre, served as a member
of the Paris Municipal Council (1871-76) and was elected five times to
the National Assembly. During an interlude when he left politics,
Clemenceau returned to journalism. His newspaper articles, permeated
with anti-clericalism and the promotion of rationalism, eventually were
bound into 19 volumes. Clemenceau contributed to L'Aurore, and
worked tirelessly for the release of Alfred Dreyfuss, writing more than a
thousand influential articles about the case. Known as "The Tiger," the
politician returned to the Chambre in 1902, became Minister of the
Interior, then premier (1906-1909). Clemenceau was again elected Prime
Minister in 1917-1920, and was toasted as "Pere Victoire" (Father
Victory) at the close of World War I. Clemenceau was a connoisseur of
the arts, and a personal friend of Rodin. He was buried, per instructions, with no rites. D. 1929.
“Not only have the 'followers of Christ' made it their rule to hack to bits all those who do not accept their beliefs, they have also ferociously massacred each other, in the name of their common 'religion of love,' under banners proclaiming their faith in Him who had expressly commanded them to love one another.”
— Georges Clemenceau, In the Evening of My Thought (Au Soir de la pensee), chapter on "Gods and Laws." Translated by William Raymond Clark, professor of French at Salem State College, Massachusetts. For more about Clemenceau, see Prof. Clark's article, "George Clemenceau: Journalist: Statesman, Atheist," Freethought Today, August 2002.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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