MRAP (NGO)


MRAP stands for Mouvement contre le racisme et pour l'amitié entre les peuples, and is an anti-racist French NGO, created in 1949. Mouloud Aounit became in 1989 its first general secretary, then president, then member of the presidential college not to belong to the French Communist Party.

Creation

The Mouvement national contre le racisme was created in 1941 by several Resisters who believed that a specific struggle against racism had to be fought in the context of France's liberation from German occupation. A primary goal was to save as many black children as possible from deportation, and the movement coordinated its actions with the Protestant and Catholic Church. Two clandestine newspapers, J'accuse in the North zone and Fraternité in the South zone, were charged with countering the Nazis' and Vichy's racist ideology.
The MRAP was created on May 22, 1949, around former MNCR members and various personalities, such as the painter Marc Chagall or the Social Catholic leader Marc Sangnier. It took the name of Mouvement contre le racisme, l'antisémitisme et pour la paix in a period during which the dominant questions were neo-nazism, anti-Semitism and the Cold War.
On January 6, 1956, at the Hôtel Lutetia in Paris, the MRAP was awarded to Jules Isaac. The award recognized the “great impact” against Antisemitism made by Isaac’s two books Jésus et Israël and Genèse de l'antisémitisme.”

Post-World War

The colonial wars and the French economy's dependence on immigrant labour during the Trente Glorieuses, extending from 1945 to 1974, changed the positions of the struggle against a racism that began to take various forms. The MRAP supported anti-colonialism and was opposed to the Algerian War. It was one of the rare organizations to condemn the methods of the police prefect Maurice Papon and the Paris massacre of 1961.
The MRAP obtained the vote of the Pleven Act on July 1, 1972, which condemns incitations to racial hate and permits anti-racist associations to depose courtsuits against those who commit such hate speech.
It became the Mouvement contre le Racisme et pour l'Amitié entre les Peuples in 1972, its current and present name.
The MRAP is also engaged in international issues. It was active against apartheid in South Africa and now struggles against racism in the United States.

Recent activities

It continues to be engaged against anti-Semitism, defends the rights of immigrants, Gypsies and fights against all forms of racism. It is also engaged in actions against the far right, as well as the right wing. In some cases, it has also criticized the Socialist Party, criticizing Ségolène Royal, the Socialist contender for the 2007 presidential election, when she released her program on security issues, stating that she was engaging in the "most dangerous kind of populism".
The MRAP was engaged in the creation of the alter-globalization NGO ATTAC in 1998. Currently, it concentrates its action against immigration-restricting laws and in favor of immigrants' rights, as well as denunciation of racism on the internet and against historical revisionism. It has been observed that a dividing line has emerged between the anti-racist organizations in France : SOS Racisme and the LICRA on one side, the MRAP and the LDH on the other: the first two reacting against racism and antisemitism incidents, sometimes amalgamating antisemitism and anti-zionism, the latter two broadening their goal to defend voting rights for foreign residents, oppose the ban of the Islamic headscarf in schools.
In 2006, the MRAP came to the defense of two women wearing headscarves who were refused service at a bed and breakfast in Vosges. The operator of the establishment, Fanny Truchelut, was successfully sued for the refusal to provide a good or a service based on personal discrimination.

Opposition to genetic studies

The organisation has voiced opposition to genetic studies being carried out in France, following advances in science and the discovery of DNA which now allows scientists to identify which Y-haplogroup a person or group belongs to. In the summer of 2015, a group of British scientists from the University of Leicester wished to study the DNA of around a hundred local volunteers from the Cotentin Peninsula in Normandy, to find out “the intensity of the Scandinavian colonisation” from the 9th century Viking invasions. Despite the French state agreeing to this, MRAP and local member Jacques Declosmenil attempted to obstruct the scientific study, saying that the scientific results "will build on the idea that there are real Normans and fake Normans."