Jacques Stern (politician)

Jacques Stern

Stern in 1932
Minister of the Merchant Marine
In office
26 October 1933  26 November 1933
Preceded by Eugène Frot
Succeeded by Eugène Frot
Minister of the Colonies
In office
24 January 1936  4 June 1936
Preceded by Louis Rollin
Succeeded by Marius Moutet
Personal details
Born (1882-04-14)14 April 1882
Paris, France
Died 21 December 1949(1949-12-21) (aged 67)
New York City, United States
Nationality French

Jacques Stern (14 April 1882 – 21 December 1949) was a wealthy French banker and politician. He was Minister of Merchant Marine in 1933 and Minister of the Colonies in 1936. While in exile in the United States during World War II (1939–45) he wrote a passionate defense of France's colonial mission.

Early years (1882–1914)

Jacques Stern was born on 14 April 1882 in Paris. He was a banker, owner of a racing stable, and one of the wealthiest members of Paris society in the period before World War I (1914–18). He was president of the Southern Railway Company (Compagnie des chemins de fer du Sud de la France). His wife was Simone de Leusse.[1]

Political career (1914–40)

Stern was interested in a political career, and assisted the cabinet of Léon Bourgeois. He was elected to the general council of the Basses-Alpes department. Stern ran for election to the legislature in April–May 1914 for the Castellane district, and was elected in the second round.[1] He was a deputy for this district of Basses-Alpes from 10 May 1914 to 7 December 1919, sitting with the Radical Left.[2] He sat on various committees, and was mainly interested in issues of finance and communications. He ran for reelection in 1919 and 1924 but was defeated both times.[1]

In 1928 Stern ran on the Left Republican list for the Digne district and was elected in the first round.[1] He was deputy for this district of Basses-Alpes from 22 April 1928 to 31 May 1932, sitting with the Left Republicans.[2] He was in turn a member of the committees of the Army (1928), of Foreign Affairs (1929) and of the Navy (1931). He was under-secretary of state for the Navy from 23 December 1930 to 27 June 1931.[1] Stern was reelected deputy for Basses-Alpes from 8 April 1932 to 31 May 1936.[2] He was Minister of the Merchant Marine from 26 October 1933 to 26 November 1933. He was Minister of the Colonies from 24 January 1936 to 4 June 1936. He was defeated in the 1936 elections.[1]

Exile (1940–49)

After the outbreak of World War II (1939–45) Stern took refuge in the United States.[1] He found a position at Princeton University. While there he wrote a book that defended France's colonial history (Les colonies françaises, passé et avenir (1943), in which he asserted that France's role had always been to free the peoples from despotic rule and raise them to a higher level of civilization.[3] According to Stern,

Down the centuries, the peoples of Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt, have repeatedly called upon the French and the British to help them, to free them from the Turkish yoke, from an inferno in which the only civilizing influence, from the time of the Crusades, was the French religious orders and their educational institutions. What the French and British administration brought was order, freedom, honest finance, railroads, public works and hygiene, not through brutal assimilationist methods, but with full consideration for native beliefs and traditions...[4]

Stern want to bind together the 40 million Frenchmen in Europe and the 60 million White and "Colored" Frenchmen overseas by transforming the colonial people into Frenchmen.[5] Stern said that there was no racial discrimination in the colonies, and the unknown soldier under the Arc de Triomphe might even be a colored Frenchman.[6] He wrote that "The gratitude and loyalty of the children of France's empire would never fail her, not even after her defeat."[7]

Jacques Stern died in New York City on 21 December 1949.[2]

Publications

  • Stern, Jacques (1943). Les colonies françaises, passé et avenir. New York: Brentano's. 
  • Stern, Jacques (1944). The French colonies, past and future. New York: Didier. 

Notes

    Sources

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