Northwest Public Television, Last Updated by Marco Werman, Amy Bracken on Apr 15, 2016 at 9:27 am
Image from, with caption, A Bondy (Seine-Saint-Denis), en avril 2010, l'acteur et producteur Samuel L. Jackson et sa femme, entourant l'ambassadeur des Etats-Unis en France, Charles Rivkin.
Among the plumb posts President Obama is expected to refill this year is Ambassador to France. The current holder of that position is Charles Rivkin, the former CEO of the Jim Henson Company, in Hollywood, and a major contributor to Obama's first presidential campaign. He will be remembered for his attention to neighborhoods traditionally ignored by high-level public officials.
When Ambassador Charles Rivkin once told a reporter that he wanted to go where no American ambassador had been before, he was referring to low-income, ethnically diverse suburbs of Paris. To Villiers Le Bel, a largely West African community that was partly destroyed by riots in 2007, Rivkin paid a visit to inaugurate a mural of Martin Luther King. After the ambassador's speech, his delegation sang, "We Shall Overcome."
Ah, good old US public diplomacy. It has a long history in Europe. But the 21st century has seen a shift, with stepped up outreach into minority – especially Muslim – communities. In France, where the policy is carried out by the cinematic Ambassador Rivkin, it has been very well-received in the immigrant suburbs.
Take, for example, the time Rivkin showed up at a minority-run media outlet with the actor Samuel L. Jackson. "I'm a fervent supporter of this approach," says Editor Nordine Nabili. "It's not that I love Americans. It's that we welcome anyone who wants to see what we do and exchange practices. When the ambassador came with Samuel Jackson, when the representative of the most important power comes and spends two hours here, with all the young people, it's very important symbolically. It's validating."
It's not just splashy visits. Rivkin and embassy staff have met with community organizations; they've invited young leaders, activists and artists to the ambassador's residence; and they've recruited candidates for State Department-funded visits to the US.
The embassy launched the initiative during the Bush administration, after 9/11.
"They had instructions from the State Department saying, 'Do something Islam, so they did something Islam," says Gilles Kepel, a French academic and expert on Islam in the Paris suburbs, or banlieues.
He says it was more than anti-Americanism among Muslims that concerned state department officials. "They sort of thought that the French were characterized by a sort of political elite that was non-mixed, that was too white, too male, too old, and that if the country was not more pluralistic, then it would become weaker, and a weaker France was not good as an ally, so they started to reach out to the banlieues."
Two US diplomatic cables, revealed by Wikileaks, laid this point out in embarrassing clarity. They slammed the French government for failing to integrate minorities into positions of power.
The Embassy in France declined to comment for this story, but it has posted on its website a long list of activities it's carried out in the suburbs, as well as information on the International Visitors Leadership Program.
Alumni of that program include elites like Francois Hollande, and Nicholas Sarkozy. But it's been expanded to people like Tara Dickman, the French daughter of South African immigrants. Obama's former campaign manager recruited her for training in community organizing in Chicago, and that trip inspired her to create a group called the Collective Against Racial Profiling.
"Within a year, police profiling went from a sort of topic that didn't exist to a major political stake," she says. "Fourteen people went to court to sue the state, and then it became a major issue in the elections, there are three law proposals now… and this is really thanks to this trip."
But not everyone is happy with what the US government has been up to in the banlieues. Among the critics is Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, a center-right member of Parliament.
"How will answer the US government if the French government decided to go in some suburbs of the United States to say to the people, 'You are not very well treated by your government, and we are going to help you. You are going to travel in France, be agent for us.' It is not acceptable. It is not possible," Dupont-Aignan says.
And he's not the only one. Benjamin Pelletier blogs about international cultural influence. He says while the French government is not doing enough to reach out to its minority communities, that doesn't justify the activism of a foreign power. "What happens when you have a certain segment of the young population that has been influenced by another country acting in its own national interest?" he asks. "Isn't there a risk of fracturing national cohesion?"
But others say the real problem is that French authorities don't recognize the potential among suburban, minority youth. Sihame Assbague, a lobbyist for the Collective Against Racial Profiling, says, "We've got an Arabic proverb that says, 'When you want to do something, you find a way. If not, you find an excuse,' and I think that those who accuse the US to interfere in French affairs, found an excuse."
Rokhaya Diallo, who went on a State Department trip to the US, says that American diplomats are, of course, acting in their own interest, but at least they're paying attention. "The ambassador of the US is seen in the suburbs more often than the ministers of our own country," she says. "Why is that? The US is identifying and courting people, while the French government continues to ignore them."
Diallo believes the US government has caught on to something important: that a future Monsieur or Madame President may well emerge from one of those diverse, underserved suburbs.
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