À propos
Biographie personnelle de Françoise Vergès
À propos
Biographie personnelle de Françoise Vergès
Early Years
My parents were anticolonial, feminist, communist intellectuals and activists in Reunion Island. My father, of Vietnamese and Réeunionese descent, and a leader of the anticolonial Communist Party, and my mother, who was French, a journalist, and a communist and feminist activist, always reminded me that the world was vaster than my island but also that the island was connected to a world that had not been exclusively shaped by Europeans, that we lived in the Indian ocean, a millennial site of exchanges and encounters between Africa and Asia, that was itself connected to other parts of the globe. I received an internationalist education, I read journals from Cuba, India, China, Egypt, the Soviet Union that were sent to my father. At the dinner table, I heard conversations on the decolonization taking place in countries of the Indian Ocean and beyond. I was taught how to observe the ways in which the French State operated as a racist and colonial power. I did not discover feminism in books but on the ground as I followed my mother in her meetings and protests with the island’s women’s movement. As a member of the Front de la Jeunesse Autonomiste Réunionnaise (FJAR), I participated in protests and meetings.





