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Comités de défense paysanne

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Peasant Defence Committee
Comités de Défense Paysanne
SuccessorAction de Défense Paysanne
FormationJanuary 1929
FounderHenri Dorgères
Founded atRennes, Brittany, France
Dissolved1939
TypeAgrarian organization
PurposePeasant rights, opposition to social security reforms, direct action
Region served
Primarily northern France (Brittany, Normandy, etc.)
Official language
French
Youth Wing President
Modeste Legouez
Key people
Henri Dorgères
Main organ
Jeunesses Paysannes
AffiliationsFront Paysan, Union nationale des syndicats agricoles
RemarksKnown for direct action, anti-tax stance and paramilitary style uniforms

The Comités de Défense Paysanne or Peasant Defense Committees was a network of radical agrarian groups France founded in 1929.

Foundation

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There had previously been groups that espoused agrarian militancy such as the "Assault Sections" of the secretive Franc-Paysannerie movement.[1][2]

It was originally founded by an agricultural editor Henri Dorgères in January 1929[3] in Rennes, Brittany as the Comité de défense paysanne contre les assurances sociales,[4][5] the promised extension[6] of which was seen as unacceptably expensive to many small farms.[7] Dorgères' credibility came from a popular service his newspaper offered to farmers which checked avertissements (land tax notices) for errors in the cadastral land surveys they were based on to reduce the taxes.[8]

The historian Robert Paxton said there were three elements to the rise of militant right wing Peasant action in interwar France; an agricultural recession triggered by low farm prices, the Third Republic's cultural contempt for rural life and a lack of conventional political leadership for small farmers which meant that public policy was committed to cheap food for urban voters.[9]

Greenshirts

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It had a youth section, the Jeunesses Paysannes, more commonly known as the Greenshirts[10] which was how his general movement was often known. The Greenshirts got their name from a uniform, inspired by Joseph Bilger's Elsässischer Bauernbund in Alsace.[1] They were involved in strikebreaking on farms (to “save the harvests”) and blocked seizures of property for nonpayment of taxes.[11]

The first President of the Jeunesses Paysannes was Modeste Legouez,[12] a future Senator for Eure[13] who opposed the socialist leader Pierre Mendes France in the 1936 French legislative election.[14]

Ideology

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A book written by Dorgeres during that time "Haut les fourches" ("Raise the Pitchforks") laid out an anti-Republican and anti-Parliamentary back to the land program.[15] They were hostile to the agencies of the Third Republic, particularly teachers.[16]

The Peasant Defense Committees were seen as differing from the more established and conservative Syndicats agricoles through a willingness to embrace direct action (including tax strikes[17] and opposing foreclosure sales[18]), a more egalitarian organisational structure that did not rely on aristocratic rural social hierarchies and the use of more militaristic attributes such as oaths and uniforms.[19] Dorgères himself was regarded as a very skillful market day orator, in a rural culture where up until that point oratory had been overlooked.[20]

Peasant Front

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In 1934 it would join up with the larger and more conservative Union nationale des syndicats agricoles and the politically eclectic French Agrarian and Peasant Party to form the Front paysan. This meant that the official stance of the Comités turned from calling for state support for agriculture to a more Corporatist stance where farmers would control the production and marketing of their produce.[21]

Despite its common stance against the Popular Front government[2] the front fell apart in 1936 due to differences in political strategy.[22]

Although it was not listed among the far right leagues that the Popular Front government dissolved in 1936, the Minister of the Interior Roger Salengro did order prefects to keep close watch on the comités.[23] During the previous election local activists had disrupted election meetings.[24]

Geographical spread

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The Committees were far more widespread and popular in the North of France compared to the South of France. In the early years they were particularly strong in the Finistère region in the west of Brittany, but had quite a large presence in Brittany and Normandy.[5] There was later success among market gardeners in Vaucluse and Var[25] but no success in places such as the wine growing areas of the Midi.[26] It kept out of other areas such as Alsace due to the presence of local groups such as the Elsässischer Bauernbund.[27]

End and aftermath

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Its expansion stopped at the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, although the organisation did manage to hold regional congresses that year.[28] Dorgeres supported the National Revolution of Petain and was named the general delegate for organization and propaganda for the Peasant Corporation,[29] a Vichy government organization that tried to embody the agrarian corporatism that the Comités and their allies embodied. He supported Petain from 1940[29] but was suspicious of the Germans due to his internment in the First World War.[30]

Dorgeres was detained after the war for his work with the Peasant Corporation, tried and sentenced to ten years of indignité nationale although he was immediately released for his work with the resistance.[29] In 1953 Dorgeres regained his citizenship rights and started Action de Défense Paysanne which revived a lot of the themes of the Comités and were active in many of the same areas. They had a cooperative but tense relationship with Paul Antier's Parti Paysan and Pierre Poujade's UCDA, for which Dorgeres was elected as a deputy.[31]

References

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  1. ^ a b Ory 1975, p. 183.
  2. ^ a b Hubscher & Lagrave 1993, p. 118.
  3. ^ Passmore 2013, p. Chapter 11.
  4. ^ or the "Committee to defend peasant farmers against social security"
  5. ^ a b Ory 1975, p. 169.
  6. ^ "LOI DU 5 AVRIL 1928 SUR LES ASSURANCES SOCIALES" (PDF). Sécurité sociale. Retrieved 8 December 2024.
  7. ^ Bensoussan 2006, chapter XIII.
  8. ^ Dorgères 1959, p. 17.
  9. ^ Paxton 1997, p. Chapter 1.
  10. ^ Paxton 1997, pp. 3–4.
  11. ^ Irvine 1999.
  12. ^ Ory 1975, pp. 183–184.
  13. ^ Charpon & Léonard 2015, para. 16.
  14. ^ Ory 1975, p. 179.
  15. ^ Bernet 1979, p. 33.
  16. ^ Ory 1975, p. 12.
  17. ^ Rissoan 2002, p. 72.
  18. ^ Dreux 1999, p. 171.
  19. ^ Paxton 1997, p. 127.
  20. ^ Allais 1997, p. 247.
  21. ^ Passmore 2013, pp. Chapter 12.
  22. ^ Ory 1975, pp. 175–176.
  23. ^ Paxton 1997, p. 137.
  24. ^ Lynch 2010, p. Para 29.
  25. ^ Hubscher 1996.
  26. ^ "French Peasant Fascism".
  27. ^ Ory 1975, p. 169, note 5.
  28. ^ Ory 1975, p. 170.
  29. ^ a b c National Assembly biography
  30. ^ d'Appollonia 1998, p. 193.
  31. ^ Handman 1967, p. 16.

Sources

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