Gisèle Halimi
Gisèle Halimi was a Tunisian-French lawyer, politician, essayist and feminist activist.
As a lawyer, she defended activists fighting for the Algerian nationalism, then a French colony, from the 1950s onwards, including members of the National Liberation Front (Algeria). From 1960 onwards, she defended the activist and militant Djamila Boupacha, who was accused of attempted murder and then survived torture and rape while being detained by French soldiers. Alongside Simone de Beauvoir, she publicized the trial in order to highlight the French army's methods of torture during the Algerian War.
A leading figure in French feminism, she was the only lawyer to sign the 1971 Manifesto of the 343, which brought together women who declared that they had had abortions and demanded free access to abortion, which was then illegal in France. In the wake of this, she founded the Choisir la cause des femmes movement, alongside Simone de Beauvoir and Jean Rostand, among others. In 1972, during the Bobigny trial, her work as a lawyer for women accused of illegal abortion led to the acquittal of three of the defendants and a suspended sentence for the fourth, and contributed to the evolution towards the Veil Act, named for Simone Veil, on voluntary termination of pregnancy in 1975.
Similarly, her high-profile defense strategy for two young women who were victims of a gang rape in 1974, tried in 1978, Anne Tonglet and Araceli Castellano, contributed to the adoption of a new law in 1980, clearly defining indecent assault and rape, allowing the latter to be recognized as a crime, whereas until then it had most often been treated as a misdemeanor under French law.
In 1981, Halimi was elected to the French National Assembly, as an independent Socialist and served as Deputy for Isère until 1984. Between 1985 and 1987, she was a French legate to UNESCO. In 1998, she was a founding member of ATTAC.
Biography
Zeiza Gisèle Élise Taïeb was born on 27 July 1927 in La Goulette, a port suburb of Tunis, Tunisia, to a Jewish family of Berber origin. Her father, Édouard Taïeb, began his career as a courier in a law office and later became a notary clerk and legal expert. He was naturalized as a French citizen in 1928. Her mother, Fortunée "Fritna" Mettoudi, adhered to traditional gender roles, a model that Halimi later cited as a catalyst for her early feminist convictions.According to Halimi, her birth was concealed for fifteen days, as the arrival of a daughter was considered a misfortune in her community at the time. At age 12, she began challenging domestic gender norms by refusing to serve her brothers and undertaking a hunger strike in protest. At 15, she rejected a proposed marriage to a wealthy oil merchant significantly older than herself.
She received a French-language education at a lycée in Tunis and later studied law and philosophy at the University of Paris. Halimi had three sons: journalist Serge Halimi and lawyer Jean-Yves Halimi from her first marriage to Paul Halimi, and journalist Emmanuel Faux from her second marriage to Claude Faux.
She died in Paris on 28 July 2020, the day after her 93rd birthday.
Career
In 1948, Halimi qualified as a lawyer and, after eight years at the Tunis bar, moved to practise at the Paris bar in 1956. She acted as a counsel for the Algerian National Liberation Front, most notably for the activist Djamila Boupacha, who had been raped and tortured by French soldiers, writing a book in 1961 to plead her case. Gisèle Halimi was unable to attend the first trial scheduled before the military court and therefore had to delegate one of her correspondents in Algeria, Pierre Garrigues, who was assassinated in Algiers on March 1, 1962. Faced with legal obstacles, she filed a complaint against General Ailleret, commander-in-chief of the armed forces in Algeria, and Pierre Messmer, Minister of the Armed Forces, for violating her client's constitutional rights. The two senior officials were charged with treachery, which brought the case to the attention of the media. She also obtained a change of venue for the trial to Caen and mobilized her networks to form a defense committee that raised the necessary funds to finance the repatriation to France. This trial was notably defended in the French newspaper Le Monde.She also defended Basque individuals accused of crimes committed during the conflict in Basque Country.
Halimi served as counsel in many cases related to women's issues. She was the only lawyer to sign the 1971 manifesto of 343 women who declared that they had had abortions and demanded free access to contraception and abortion. Alongside Simone de Beauvoir and Jean Rostand, among others, she founded the feminist movement Choisir la cause des femmes in 1971 and campaigned for the decriminalization of abortion. to protect the women who had signed the Manifesto of the 343 admitting to having had illegal abortions, of whom she was one. Her primary goal was to defend the signatories of the manifesto of the 343 who could be charged, and beyond that, to fight for the revision of the 1920 law prohibiting women from controlling their fertility through contraception or abortion. She assumed the presidency of this association upon the death of Simone de Beauvoir..
During the Bobigny trial in 1972, which had a considerable impact, she first obtained the court's acquittal for Marie-Claire Chevalier, a 16-year-old girl who had an abortion after being raped, a suspended sentence for the mother, and acquittal for the two friends who had helped Marie-Claire. She used this trial as a platform to speak out against the law criminalizing abortion. This trial contributed to the evolution towards the Veil Act on voluntary termination of pregnancy, passed in December 1974 and promulgated in January 1975.
Close to François Mitterrand, she was elected to parliament in the 1981 legislative elections, a position she held until 1984. An activist for gender parity in politics, in 1982 she secured the passage of a law authorizing gender quotas in elections, but the text was overturned by the Constitutional Council (France). Alongside Robert Badinter, she was behind the law repealing the distinction between the age of consent for heterosexual and homosexual relations.
From 1985 onwards, she held several successive positions at UNESCO and then at the United Nations.
In 1998, she was a founding member of the anti-globalization association Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions and for Citizens' Action.
In 2008, she published an essay with the association Choisir entitled La clause de l'Européenne la plus favorisée, which proposes extending the most favorable provisions in each area of women's rights to all citizens of every member country of the European Union. In 2009, she was a member of the sponsorship committee for the Russell Tribunal on Palestine.
Honors
Honorary member of the Order of Lawyers of Mexico in 1982.Personality of the Year Award from the Grand Jury of International Distinction in 1983.
Minerva Award from the Club delle Donne, in the "Field of Politics and Social Engagement" section.
Medal of the Paris Bar Association.
In 2021, an online petition signed by 35,000 people asked that Giséle Halimi be honoured by being reburied at the Panthéon in Paris or be granted Panthéon honours, alongside Simone Veil, Geneviève de Gaulle-Anthonioz, Marie Curie, Germaine Tillion, Sophie Berthelot and also Josephine Baker.
On 26 July 2024, a statute of Gisèle Halimi was among the ten statutes of women at the 2024 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in Paris, with the philosopher and poet Christine de Pizan, the explorer Jeanne Barret, the revolutionary Olympe de Gouges, the anarchist Louise Michel, the film director Alice Guy, the athlete Alice Milliat, the writer Paulette Nardal, the philosopher Simone de Beauvoir and the politician Simone Veil.
Works
| Title | English translation | Time of first publication | First edition publisher/publication | Unique identifier | Notes |
| Djamila Boupacha | 1962 | Gallimard | |||
| Le procès de Burgos | The Burgos Trials | 1971 | |||
| La cause des femmes | The Cause of Women | 1973 | |||
| Avortement, une loi en procès | Abortion, a Law on Trial | 1973 | |||
| The Right to Choose | 1977 | ||||
| Viol, Le procès d'Aix: Choisir la cause des femmes | Rape, the Aix Trial: Choosing the Cause of Women | 1978 | |||
| Le Programme commun des femmes | The Common Women's Program | 1978 | |||
| le Lait de l'Oranger | Milk for the Orange Tree | 1988 | |||
| Une embellie perdue | A Lost Beauty | 1995 | |||
| La nouvelle cause des femmes | The New Cause of Women | 1997 | |||
| Fritna | 1999 | ||||
| La parité dans la vie politique | Parity in Political Life | 1999 | |||
| Avocate irrespectueuse | Disrespectful Counsel | 2002 | |||
| Le procès de Bobigny: Choisir la cause des femmes | The Bobigny Trial: Choosing the Cause of Women | 2006 | Preface by Simone de Beauvoir | ||
| La Kahina | 2006 | ||||
| Ne vous résignez jamais | Never Resign Yourself | 2009 | |||
| Histoire d'une passion | History of a Passion | 2011 | Plon | ||
| Une farouche liberté | 2020 | Grasset | With Annick Cojean |