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Jean Jaures.
Jean
Jaurés, the son of an unsuccessful businessman, was born in Castres,
France, on 3rd September, 1859. He won a scholarship
to the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. After graduating he
taught in schools before becoming a lecturer on philosophy at the University
of Toulouse (1883-85).
Jaurés
was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1885. Defeated in the 1889
elections he returned to the University of Toulouse. He became increasingly
radical in his political views and after reading Karl
Marx he began advocating socialism. He was not a revolutionary and
supported the Independent Socialists led by Alexandre
Millerand.
In
1893 Jaurés was elected to the Chamber of Deputies to represent
the working class area of Carmaux. He became involved in the campaign
to get the conviction of Alfred Dreyfus overturned. This was not a popular
cause at the time and was partly responsible for his defeat in the 1898
election.
In
1900 a congress was held where socialists attempted to obtain a united
party. This proved impossible but two new grouping did emerge, the revolutionary
Socialist Party of France and the French Socialist
Party, under the leadership of Jaurés, that advocated a parliamentary
route to power.
The
Socialist Party of France was led by Jules Guesde
and Edouard Vaillant. This party failed
to make much progress and in 1905 it merged with the French
Socialist Party.
While out of parliament
Jaurés completed his mammoth Socialist
History of the French Revolution. He
also joined with Aristide
Briand and Rene
Viviani in 1904 to establish the left-wing
newspaper, L'Humanité in
1904.
As well as editing
L'Humanité Jaurés
continued to write history books and published The
Franco-German War (1908) and The
New Army (1910). At the Second International
he opposed those European politicians calling for armed insurrection.
Instead he advocated a policy of "peace through arbitration".
The
new Socialist Party under Jaurés
grew rapidly at the beginning of the century but split over the correct
response to German militarism. Jaurés advocated a policy of international
arbitration whereas others supported the Triple
Entente.
During
the war fever that swept through Europe during the summer of 1914, Jaurés
continued to argue for peaceful negotiations between the European governments.
On 31st July, 1914, Jean Jaurés was assassinated by a young French
nationalist who wanted to go to war with Germany.
Jean
Jaures: Marxists Archive
Jean
Jaures: Wikipedia
Jean
Jaures: Spartacus
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Military
Commanders and the First World War
Battle
of the Somme
Jean
Jaures
(1)
The Manchester
Guardian (1st August, 1914)
Grave as is the international situation even the probable imminence
of war has been overshadowed for the moment in Paris by the appalling
crime this evening of which I was an eye-witness. It is impossible to
one who knew M. Jaures, whom one could not help loving, to write about
it calmly with the grief fresh upon one. I was dining with a member
of my family and a friend at the Cafe du Croissant, the well-known resort
of journalists in the Rue Montmartre close to many
newspaper offices including that of the Humanite. M. Jaures was also
dining there with some Socialist deputies and members of the staff of
the Humanite. He came in later than we did. I spoke to him just
as he entered and had a short conversation with him about the prospects
of war and peace. Like everyone else, he feared that war was probable,
but he still had some faith that Sir Edward Grey might succeed in inducing
Germany to be conciliatory. If some sort of conference could be arranged,
he thought, peace might even yet be secured; and if the French Government
would bring pressure to bear on Russia and the German Government on
Austria an arrangement might be possible. He added, however, that he
feared the French Government might not do that. What a crime war will
be and what a monstrous folly. The last words that he said to me was
an inquiry about M. Anatole France, who, he said, must be deeply distressed
by the situation.
At about half-past
nine, when we were just finishing dinner, two pistol shots suddenly
resounded in the restaurant. At first we did not understand what had
happened, and for a moment thought that there was shooting in the street
outside. Then we saw that M. Jaures had fallen sideways on the bench
on which he was sitting, and the screams of the women who were present
told us of the murder. It should be explained that M. Jaures and his
friends were sitting on a bench with their backs to the open window
of the restaurant, and the shots were feed from the street through the
window. M. Jaures was shot in the head, and the murderer must have held
the pistol close to his victim. A surgeon was hastily summoned, but
he could do nothing, and M. Jaures died quietly without regaining consciousness
a few minutes after the crime. Meanwhile the murderer had been seized
and handed over to the police, who had to protect him from the crowd
which had quickly collected in the street. At that hour in the evening
the Rue Moatmastte is filled with newsvendors waiting for the late editions
of the evening papers.
It is said that
the murderer is a member of the Royalist society Action Francaise, but
I have not yet been able to discover whether this report is true or
not. A more cold-blooded and cowardly murder was never committed. The
scene in and about the restaurant was heartrending; both men and women
were in tears and their grief was terrible to see. It is as yet too
early to say what the effect of the murder will be, but it may be considerable.
M. Jaures has died a victim to the cause of peace and humanity.
In any case the
French Chauvinists and reactionaries cannot escape a large share of
the responsibility for this murder. For years their organs in the press
have been denouncing M. Jaures as a traitor sold to Germany, and the
language used by the Action Franfaise has been almost a direct incitement
to his assassination. Even such comparatively
moderate Chauvinist papers as the Temps have bandied the charge of treason
recklessly. I have known M. Jaures well, and a more simple-hearted man
I never met in my life. He was absolutely free from personal vanity
and personal ambition, and gave up the whole of his life to the cause
of Socialism and peace. His death is a terrible loss to the
Socialist party in France which cannot replace him without the very
greatest difficulty.
It is the intention
of the Government to issue a proclamation to the people of Paris expressing
the national mourning at the death of M. Jaures and calling upon the
people of Paris to remain calm.
A register has been
opened at the offices of the Humanite in order that the people may express
their sympathy. Hundreds of people are outside the office waiting to
come in.