Spotlight on France - Podcast: Teaching French values, Covid in the Pyrenees and the Plague in Marseille

Loading player...
As France reels from the brutal murder of teacher Samuel Paty, teachers weigh in on their role in transmitting French values, notably laïcité. A visit to a town in the Pyrenees Orientales, which until recently was something of a Covid-free haven. And the fateful day in November 1347 when the Black Death docked in Marseille.

Teachers were understandably shaken by the beheading of Samuel Paty, and it's raised questions on how to talk about freedom of speech and expression in class. One of the fundamental roles of French public school is to transmit French values to students, and many teachers see that as part of their job. But there is sometimes a disconnect between the way a value like laïcité, or secularism, is defined on paper and the shape it takes outside school. Teachers have to reconcile that. Rachid Zerrouki (@rachidowsky13) who teaches in a special education section of a middle school in Marseille, and wrote about his experience in the book Les incasables, shares his thoughts on teaching laïcité to his students. And Julie Van Rechem (@Chouyo), a history teacher in Paris, talks about walking a fine line when showing her students the controversial Charlie Hebdo caricatures. (Listen @0'00")

The small, picturesque town of Céret down in the south west corner of France came through this Spring's first coronavirus wave virtually unscathed and continued enjoying the blue skies, mount Canigou and proudly celebrating its Catalan culture. But as the number of infections has risen dramatically in the Pyrénees-Orientales départment to which it belongs, it now has a night time curfew and its bars and cafés are closed. Local people are struggling to accept the restrictions but determined to carry on connecting to one another. (Listen @18'10'')

In April, France's health chief, Jérôme Salomon, compared the Covid-19 pandemic to the 1347 Black Death pandemic in Europe. It's a heavy comparison because the plague ended up killing, by some accounts, up to half the continent's population. It came in via Marseille, on 1 November 1347, and spread from there, before quarantining was introduced. (Listen @15'25'')

This episode was mixed by Cécile Pompéani.

Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on iTunes (link here), Google podcasts (link here), on Spotify (link here), or your favourite podcast app.
28 Oct 2020 English South Africa News

Other recent episodes

Podcast: War economy, France's supercomputers, La Marseillaise and the Republic

A French-German weapons manufacturer ramps up production to meet the needs of France's war economy. An encounter with France's largest supercomputer dedicated to artificial intelligence. And how the Marseillaise national anthem has contributed to reinforcing French values and ideals. Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, President…
10 Apr 29 min

Podcast: French wine in Africa, confronting obesity, video game giant

The Nigerian woman helping Bordeaux wine find new markets in Africa. Confronting France's fatphobia by classifying obesity as a disease. And the story of the French video game company behind the hit game Assassin's Creed. As French people consume less wine, and exports to China are slowing down, the wine…
27 Mar 29 min

Podcast: Women wage outrage, farmers face organic slump, Ravel's Bolero

Despite a raft of laws and programmes in France to address the gender pay gap, women still earn less than men. Organic farmers try to adapt to a drop in demand for organic food. And the story of Ravel's Boléro – the world's most performed piece of classical music. There…
13 Mar 30 min

Podcast: AI 'à la française', immigration fact vs feeling, disability law

A French large language model adds European context and nuance to the dominant artificial intelligence being developped by US tech giants and China. Is France really being "flooded" with immigrants? The numbers say no, but the feeling remains. And the mixed legacy of a landmark law on disability and inclusion, 20…
13 Feb 33 min

Podcast: Budget woes, medical cannabis stalled, French comic who defied Hitler

How France's budget cuts will impact development work abroad and civil society at home. An inconclusive medical marijuana experiment leaves patients in limbo. And how Jewish comedian Pierre Dac used humour in the Resistance. The government’s budget for 2025, if passed, will see public spending slashed by €32 billion. While…
30 Jan 32 min