
1984
"Well, I believe in anarchy! And I believe it will come true one day." That's what "May the Rebel," a union activist, anti-militarist, and anarchist, always ready to denounce oppression and defend victims, affirms at 85. Born in Brittany, she earned her living at age 10 delivering butter. In Paris, at 20, she became involved with the Anarchist Union. Sébastien Faure became her mentor. She used a grenade to trigger the Sacco-Vanzetti affair. A union delegate in Moscow in 1922, she sang "Hymn to Anarchy" before Trotsky. Children during the Spanish Civil War, Jews during the Second World War, conscientious objectors alongside Louis Lecoin during the Algerian War, and later, through her newspaper Le Réfractaire, the Larzac, Plogoff, and Creys-Malville protests—all these were battlegrounds for May Picqueray. To the very end, she remained true to her commitment to defending peace and individual liberties.

May Picqueray
Self

Laurent Ruquier, on ne demande qu'à le connaître

Annie Ernaux, je suis née quelque part

Jack Lang, le beau rôle

Esperanto

Mads Mikkelsen, Devil In The Flesh

Frantz Fanon: His Life, His Struggle, His Work

Kubota

Poets Against the Bomb

Bettina Rheims

The Man Who Made Angels Fly

Sylvia Kristel – Paris

The Man Who Returns from Above

Tell Me Iggy

Algerian Refugees

Cerrone - Supernature

The Panafrican Festival in Algiers

Salam

Algérie Tours Détours

TYSON

Connections: Ray Johnson On-Line