Jonathan P. Eburne,
"Adoptive Affinities: Josephine Baker's Humanist International"
(page 3 of 6)
Baker's logic for selecting twelve ethnically and religiously
distinct children was no less metonymic than Bouillon's taxonomy—indeed,
as names like Brahim and Marianne suggest, the children were both chosen
and, in many cases, named for their ability to represent ethnicities and
religions that were manifestly divided, as were Algerians and French
colonial pieds-noirs at the time of the children's adoption,
during the Algerian War. The symbolic nature of the rainbow tribe
extended beyond this metonymic form of representation, however,
comprising Baker's broader theory of adoption as a calculated, albeit
compromised form of symbolic militancy against the politics of
segregation in the United States. That is, Baker's ideas about
adoption—and I mean here both the literal adoption of children, as well
as the more figurative adoption of French nationalism—were forged in
opposition to the biological determinism that still characterized race
relations in the postwar United States. Baker was far from the naïve
idealist she is often portrayed as having become in her later years
when, separated from Bouillon, she was forced to tour continually and
ultimately had to sell Les Milandes at auction to cover her debts.
Bouillon, in particular, helped promulgate this negative image when, in
his contributions to Baker's autobiography, he repeatedly foreshadows
the chateau's bankruptcy, writing of how he "realized yet again that
Josephine was much too pure and childlike for our times" and that he
needed to protect her idealism and dedication.[10]
Ishmael Reed echoes this sentiment in more withering terms in a 1976 review of Steven
Papich's book Remembering Josephine. Whereas Reed's review begins
by comparing Baker to God, it ends by ridiculing "the doomed
multi-cultural experiment in which she brought together children of all
races in hopes of building a community of brotherhood at Milandes. The
children hated each other. One of the ungrateful wretches called her a
'slut,' after which she suffered her first heart attack. The others
became junkies, thieves, bleeders, and cry-babies."[11]
But how quixotic was Baker's adoptive project? If anything, the
project was marked by a surfeit of pragmatism. Far from some utopian
ideal, Les Milandes remains significant precisely for its geographical
specificity: envisioned as a center for international tolerance and
fraternity, its relation to a universal humanism hinged upon its quaint
rural setting in southwestern France, removed from metropolitan Paris or
New York. What made the chateau's physical setting significant was its
symbolic value as a bastion of non-cosmopolitan Frenchness. Baker's
insistence on situating her global village on French soil reveals her
efforts simultaneously to appeal to and ignore the French Republic's
assimilationist colonial policies, toward which her pre-war performances
had so notably been co-opted. As she wrote in a letter to the French
Prime Minister Georges Pompidou in 1966, Baker envisioned a College of
Brotherhood at Les Milandes as a place where students of color from
Africa and the Caribbean could avoid the disenfranchisement they faced
in other French cities, where their loitering was a disappointment to
the hard-working parents back home who had struggled to send them to
school in France. The pastoral environment of Les Milandes, she argued,
could keep students interested. Baker also stressed that it was her
fidelity to "la Douce France"—and her faith in what France stood
for—that kept her there, even though a number of African, South and
Central American countries had all proposed, she claimed, that she found
similar global village projects there.
The broad, pluralistic humanism that guided Baker's formation of the
"rainbow tribe" at Les Milandes reflected her belief in the ability to
transcend the national and biological categories her pluralism
nonetheless presupposed. Like the United Nations, Baker's adoptive
practices were based on the humanistic paradox of institutionalizing
tolerance and friendship as a kind of supplement to existing social and
political conditions: regardless of how natural or inalienable these
ethical bonds might be, they still required administration. As she
asserted in countless lectures, interviews, and letters, the traditional
categories of nation, family, and race she regarded as biologically
fixed were not deterministic. That is, they could not be abolished, but
they could be voluntarily supplanted.
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