Travail, famille, patrie (French pronunciation: [tʁavaj famij patʁi]; English: Work, family, fatherland) was the motto of the French State (usually known as Vichy France) during World War II. It replaced the republican motto, Liberté, égalité, fraternité of the Third French Republic.[1]
Contents |
The Law of 10 July 1940 gave Marshal Pétain full powers to draw up a constitution before being submitted to the Nation and guaranteeing “the rights of Work, of the Family and of the Homeland (la Patrie)”. That constitution was never promulgated.
In the Deux Mondes (Two Worlds) Magazine of 15 September 1940, Marshal Pétain wrote this repudiation of the motto of the French Republic. Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité : When our young people […] approach adult life, we shall say to them […] that real liberty cannot be exercised except under the shelter of a guiding authority, which they must respect, which they must obey […]. We shall then tell them that equality [should] set itself within the framework of a hierarchy, founded on the diversity of office and merits. […] Finally, we shall tell them that there is no way of having true brotherhood except within those natural groups, the family, the town, the homeland. [2].
The motto Travail, Famille, Patrie was originally that of the Croix-de-Feu, then of the Parti social français (PSF or French Social Party) founded by Colonel de La Rocque.[3].
It has often been written that these three words express the Révolution nationale (RN), the National Revolution undertaken by the Vichy regime.
On the 24th April 1941 Marshal Pétain officially inaugurated the 1st of May as the fête du Travail et de la Concorde sociale, the day on which work and mutual understanding were celebrated.
The regime won over some trades unionists for the drawing up of a Work Charter. In it they declared themselves against both capitalism and socialism - the pétainist regime advocated the finding of a third way.
It is often told than in 1941 the Vichy Government set up a retirement system; the allowance for old, waged workers[4][5], but actually it renewed the old contribution-based retirement system which was devalued by inflation and extraordinary expenses[6]
The regime wrote Mothers’ Day into the calendar. With regard to the family, there had been continuity rather than a break with the family policy of the period of the Daladier government, which continued through the Pétain years; into the Fourth Republic.[7]
The nationalism of Pétain, who saw himself as maintaining the tradition of the victorious nationalism of 1918, did not stop his collaborating with the Nazi regime. To the day he died, he kept a certain degree of germanophobia of the sort expressed by Charles Maurras. He had no pro-German or anti-British record from before the war. Several times, he restated that he regarded himself as the ally and friend of Great Britain. In his broadcast of 23 June 1940, he reproached Winston Churchill for the speech made by Churchill on 22 June 1940, following the signature of the armistice on that day.[8].