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8 - Freeze frame: René Cassin in 1944

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2013

Jay Winter
Affiliation:
Yale University, Connecticut
Antoine Prost
Affiliation:
Université de Paris I
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Summary

The man who returned to Paris at the beginning of September 1944 was not the same as the man who had left France in June 1940. The professor of law had become a national and an international leader. The jurist who, through his work for veterans, had been close to the political arena without having entered it through electoral mandate had been launched into the high politics not only of France but of the Allied world. He benefited from the cachet of being one of the first of de Gaulle’s close advisors. He had been responsible for the successful re-establishment of Republican legality. In the following years he would occupy numerous official positions. He would not, though, have a political career which his role in Free France might have prepared him for in 1944 or after, even after de Gaulle’s return to power in 1958. He would never become a major political figure, but rather would serve as one of the highest civil servants in France. How can we account for his personal trajectory?

The man in the portrait

If we had met René Cassin in 1944, we would have found a man in conservative clothes, befitting a professor of law. Not very tall – 5 feet 6 inches – his manner was open and lively. Like many of the men of his generation, he wore a beard, which he groomed carefully: while most shaved it off as they grew older, he kept it all his life, which gave him a certain distinguished air. Seeing this bearded man, the young volunteer Daniel Cordier immediately identified him in the entourage of de Gaulle. After the war Marceau Long referred to Cassin as having ‘that “beautiful white beard”’. Others spoke about his voice: ‘a low voice, at one and the same time, soft and authoritative’, as Pierre Racine said. Another man who worked with Cassin recalled his low voice ‘with its charming Mediterranean accent, and without rhetorical gestures’. No one described Cassin as an invalid: there was no trace in his comportment of the consequences of his war wounds, although he wore throughout his life a surgical belt.

Type
Chapter
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René Cassin and Human Rights
From the Great War to the Universal Declaration
, pp. 200 - 218
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

Cordier, Daniel, Alias Caracalla (Paris: Gallimard, 2009), p. 287Google Scholar
Comité d’Histoire de l’Ecole Nationale d’Administration, René Cassin et l’Ecole Nationale d’Administration (Paris: La Documentation Française, 2004), p. 53Google Scholar
382AP160, list of stockholders, annexed to a letter of P. Blanchonnet to Cassin, 16 May 1947. He owned twenty of 300 stock certificates of Ici-Paris (valued at 10,000 francs each). His brother Fédia had ten certificates, and his cousin Max ten as well. For the year 1947, he received 7,000 francs in dividends (letter of Blanchonnet to Cassin, 29 June 1948). As the circulation of this paper increased, so did its dividends, until it closed in 1974.
Robert, Jacques, asking if, after the Nobel Prize, there was anything else he wished for, he replied: ‘If, after my death, my remains could be transferred to the Panthéon, it would please me very much.’ De la France libre aux droits de l'homme. L’héritage de René Cassin (Paris: La Documentation Française, 2010), p. 97Google Scholar
Crémieux-Brilhac, J.-L., Ici Londres. Les voix de la liberté, 1940–1944 (Paris: La Documentation Française, 1975)Google Scholar
Bellanger, Claude, Godechot, Jacques, Pierre Guiral and Fernand Terron, in Histoire générale de la presse française, vol. 5, De 1958 à nos jours (Paris: PUF, 1976), p. 384Google Scholar
René Cassin (1887–1976). Une pensée ouverte sur le monde moderne. Hommage au Prix Nobel de la Paix 1968, Actes du colloque organisé par l’Association René-Cassin et le Collège de France le 22 octobre 1998 au Collège de France (Paris: H. Champion, 2001)
Chouraqui, André, L’amour fort comme la mort. Une autobiographie (Paris: R. Laffont, 1990)Google Scholar
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