France bestows highest honour on First World War poet

Maurice Genevoix's final resting place will be among France's literary greats

(FILES) This file photo taken on February 27, 1979 shows French writer Maurice Genevoix, secretary of the Académie Française, at the Cercle interallié in Paris.  / AFP / Georges BENDRIHEM
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France will on Wednesday move the remains of First World War writer Maurice Genevoix into its Pantheon of national heroes in Paris, an honour championed by President Emmanuel Macron to encourage remembrance of the conflict.

Genevoix wrote five memoirs of his time as a front-line soldier experiencing the horrors of trench warfare in the conflict, which he later collected into a single book Ceux de 14 or Men of 14.

The work is considered by many to be the single greatest literary work to have emerged in French from the 1914-18 war, with its raw insight into the experience of battle drawing comparisons with Storm of Steel by German writer Ernst Juenger or the English poetry of Wilfred Owen.

The Pantheon is a secular temple to France's literary luminaries such as Voltaire, Rousseau, Dumas, Hugo and Malraux as well as other great figures from culture, science and politics.

The remains of 70 men are housed under the great dome of the neoclassical building but – controversially for some – only five women have been given the honour.

Only the president can decide on moving personalities to the Pantheon, and Mr Macron has used this authority only once before, in 2018, to give Simone Veil, a former French minister who survived the Holocaust, the honour of a final resting place there.

While the final choice rests with the president, the move can always be vetoed by descendants, as happened when the family of Albert Camus thwarted a bid in 2009 by then-president Nicolas Sarkozy to move his remains to the Pantheon.

There is also sometimes controversy, and a campaign that has divided French cultural commentators is in progress to give poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine – known for their stormy relationship as well as impassioned verse – a final resting place in the Pantheon.

Mr Macron will preside over Wednesday's ceremony, which is taking place on the November 11 Armistice Day that remembers the dead in the world wars.

Marking 102 years since the end of First World War, an installation by French composer Pascal Dusapin and German artist Anselm Kiefer commissioned by the Elysee will be put in the Pantheon.

The moving of Genevoix's remains had initially been scheduled for last year but was delayed to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the burial of the unknown soldiers in the Arc de Triomphe.

"Genevoix was the voice of memory. Through him, the voice of the Men of 14 never ceases to urge us not to drop our guard and to preserve our vigilance when the worst reappears again," Mr Macron said.

Genevoix participated in the battle of the Marne and the march on Verdun. Promoted to lieutenant, he saw the daily life of the infantryman – the mud, the blood, the storms of steel, what he called all this "insane farce".

Genevoix, then 24, was badly wounded in April 1915 and treated in hospital for seven months, and began to write from notes made in the trenches, with his first memoir published as war still raged in 1916.

He wrote five memoirs, which he then compiled into Men of 14 in 1949.

"What we did was more than could be asked of men and we did it," he wrote in the work.

In later life, he wrote novels and also became a champion of ecological causes. He died at the age of 89 in 1980.