/ 10 June 2011

The end of French machismo

Among a group of women shouting “We’re all chambermaids!”, a soft-spoken 43 year old was glad to see feminists taking to Paris streets in the wake of the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair.

The well-dressed woman, who now counsels sexual violence victims, said she had been attacked by a French businessman with political connections but had never pressed charges.

“I was raped by a powerful man. I went to the police; they said the pressure would fall on me and I risked being destroyed. I didn’t take it any further. Victims feel they have almost no voice in France. We hope that might change now.”

France now talks about “before and after DSK”. Two weeks since the head of the International Monetary Fund and great Socialist hope for president was arrested and charged with attempting to rape a New York hotel maid, a sexual revolution is under way.

Strauss-Kahn denies the allegations. But whatever the outcome of his case, it has sparked an outpouring against French sexism and harassment disguised as “gallantry”, as well as a new openness about tackling rape.

France always prided itself on a tradition of unbridled sexuality and a society based on seduction in which former president Jacques Chirac kissed female leaders’ hands and declared that Michele Alliot-Marie, who served as justice, defence and foreign minister, had “the best legs” on the right.

Many argued that the dreaded “American puritanism” — the United States’ strict laws on workplace touching and harassment — would make France a dull place. But now the floodgates have opened on women denouncing French machismo.

When Le Parisien reported this week that the sports minister, Chantal Jouanno, avoided wearing skirts in parliament for fear of salacious comments from male MPs, other political women confessed they did the same.

It was not the Strauss-Kahn charges that caused the backlash but the perceived belittling of rape and sexism by leading French thinkers reacting to his case. Suddenly France, the land of feminist luminary Simone de Beauvoir, was being lampooned abroad as a macho backwater. Feminists held street protests and young male politicians rushed to sign a mayor’s antisexism petition distancing themselves from what the US media called the reign of the French “dirty old man”.

Despite the outrage Socialist Jack Lang has stuck by his comments that Strauss-Kahn should have been released on bail earlier, considering that “no one had died”. Journalist and philosopher Jean-Francois Kahn dismissed the case as a troussage de domestique, a phrase suggestive of French aristocrats having non-consensual sex with servants. He later apologised and quit journalism.

One female Socialist MP, wearing trousers and a summer top to a recent commission hearing, was reportedly told by a right-wing MP: “Dressed like that, you shouldn’t be surprised at being raped.” Former environment minister Corinne Lepage told Libération newspaper that she had seen a female MP raise the issue of a rape in parliament and a male MP shout: “With a face like that it’s hardly going to happen to you.” Female politicians complained of jokes, catcalls, belittling and attempts to chat them up. Political journalists spoke of politicians who repeatedly texted them, locked them in cars or knocked on their hotel room doors during party conferences.

Sexism in French politics had long been decried, notably in 2007 when Patrick Devedjian, a senior ally of President Nicolas Sarkozy, was forced to apologise after calling a female politician a salope — bitch or slut. But since l’affaire DSK feminists hope there is no going back.

The real impact is legal. Chantal Brunel, MP and head of France’s sexual equality watchdog, said: “I think the DSK affair will do more to further the cause of women in terms of violence than any law. Because today laws already exist on violence — the problem is women speaking out.” Rape-crisis telephone lines reported an increase in calls in recent days. Counsellors said the fact that the whole country was talking about a sexual assault alleged by a hotel worker against a powerful man had broken the code of silence in France, where only one in 10 rapes is reported.

Renowned feminist lawyer Gisele Halimi warned that if the DSK affair had happened in France, it would likely have been hushed up and never have reached court.

Sarkozy, whose low poll ratings have climbed slightly in recent days, is sensitive to the national mood. He condemned sexist comments about the DSK case, saying: “Frankly some things we’ve heard we would have preferred not to.” This week the civil service minister, Georges Tron, was forced to resign from the government after two women, emboldened by the Strauss-Kahn case, filed complaints for harassment, including inappropriate foot massages and groping. The state prosecutor opened a preliminary inquiry into sexual assault. Tron denied the allegations and threatened to sue the women for libel, but they told French radio they would not be scared off and would pursue the complaint.

It is unusual for a Sarkozy minister to leave government so fast, particularly before charges are laid, but the president could not risk the effect of public opinion. Former prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said a “return to morals” would now be at the heart of next year’s presidential election campaign.

For many, the French culture of sexual conquest is a hangover from the old, monarchic traditions of the Ancien Régime: powerful men seen as having a right to exact ­sexual favours from subordinates, and political leaders held in esteem for their libido. —