Marseille's Ethnic Bouillabaisse
Some view Europe's most diverse city as a laboratory of the continent's future
- By Andrew Purvis
- Photographs by Kate Brooks
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
On any given evening, in clubs that fringe La Plaine, a district of bars and nightclubs about a 15-minute walk up the hill from the Vieux Port, global musical styles, from reggae to rap to jazz to West African rap-fusion, pound into the night. As I strolled along darkened cobblestone streets not long ago, I passed a salsa club and a Congolese band playing in a Jamaican style known as rub-a-dub. On the outside wall of a bar, a mural showed a golden-domed cathedral set against a fantastical skyline of mosques—an idealized vision of a multicultural city on a cobalt blue sea that bears a striking resemblance to Marseille itself.
Not long before I left the city, I met with Manu Theron, a percussionist and vocalist who leads a band called Cor de La Plana. Although he was born in the city, Theron spent part of his childhood in Algeria; there, in the 1990s, he played in Arab cabarets, clubs he likens to saloons in the Wild West, complete with whiskey, pianos and prostitutes. Also around that time, he began singing in Occitan, the centuries-old language related to French and Catalan, once spoken widely in the region. As a youngster in Marseille, he had sometimes heard Occitan. "Singing this language," he says, "is very important to remind people of where they come from." Nor does it bother him that audiences don't understand his lyrics. As a friend puts it, "We don't know what he is singing about, but we like it anyway." The same might be said of Marseille: in all its diversity, the city may be difficult to comprehend—but somehow, it works.
Writer Andrew Purvis, the bureau chief for Time in Berlin, has reported extensively on European and African immigration issues. Photographer Kate Brooks is based in Beirut, Lebanon.
Books
The Rough Guide to Provence & the Côte d’Azur, Rough Guides, 2007
My Town: Ford p. 96 none, per AM
Presence of Mind, p. 102
A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World by Gregory Clark, Princeton University Press, 2007
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Comments (2)
funny comment : "france is a racist country". is it not racist in itself to say that ? could we say, in reciprocity, that for example "arabic countries are lands of thieves" ? do we have to accept polygamy, excision, forced weddings, hatred and violence, in the name of "tolerance" ? is THAT being racist ? the so-called "pacific bouillabaisse" in marseille is only pacific because we accept every muslim's request - should we not bend and resign, it would look just like ethiopia or lebanon. "you chose shame against war, you got shame AND war" - this is soon to happen. churchill in munich : "we had to chose between dishonor and war - we chose dishonor and we got war". Or else : "An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile—hoping it will eat him last. "
Posted by claude on January 6,2008 | 02:49 AM
The reviews are very interesting and objective, but I would not say the same about the photos. You could have shown some more pictures with the other part of the population. There are also Spanish, Italian, Indochinese, and French people in this city. According to your pics, I am afraid your readers will have a quite oriented idea of Marseille. IT IS what you point but NOT only what you show. Thank you anyway for this good work. It helps people abroad (far away !) to know (better ?) Marseille.. Cordially Henri Zunino Marseille
Posted by Zunino on December 4,2007 | 12:26 PM