Porno Incest Scandal

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"La familia grande" written by Camille Kouchner, in Paris and published on January 7, 2021 accuses ... [+] renowned French political scientist Olivier Duhamel of incest. Photo by Joel Saget.
Just as social media or the tabloid press are the usual channels for breaking sexual scandals involving prominent individuals in other countries, in France the preferred medium is the book.
This time, the scandal shaking the French literary and political elite — bringing down a highly prominent intellectual figure with accusations of incest and the silence surrounding it — started with La Familia Grande (The Big Family), a book written by Camille Kouchner , a prestigious lawyer and academic.
Just published, the book “is not just the story of incest,” notes Le Point . “It is not just the story of a secret, a lie, an omerta.”
“By denouncing the crime of her stepfather Olivier Duhamel, Camille Kouchner also paints the disturbing portrait of an environment."
According to the Huffington Post, one in ten French people are victims of incest and 165.000 kids would be raped every year.
Kouchner accuses the influential Olivier Duhamel, one of France’s most prestigious political scientists, academics and media personalities — and who resigned his various posts last week — of sexually abusing his stepson (her twin brother), "Victor" (not his real name), when they were teenagers.
Constitutionalist and French political scientist, Olivier Duhamel. Photo by Eric Fougere
Victor and Camille are the children of Bernard Kouchner, another well-known French public personality, co-founder of Doctors Without Borders and former French foreign minister, and Evelyne Pisier, an academic, writer, political scientist, sister of the actress Marie-France Pisier, who was once Fidel Castro’s lover and who died in 2017.
Kouchner and Pisier were divorced and Evelyne was married to Duhamel.
The facts, according to the book, took place at the end of the 1980s, when Evelyne Pisier felt into alcoholism and depression after the suicides, in quick succession, of her parents.
Camille Kouchner writes that she knew about the abuse because her brother confided in her early on. But she, along with her mother, father, aunt and many others around them, kept silent — granting, as she writes, “a kind of ‘consent’ to the crime and becoming its accomplice.”
For Le Monde , which along with The Nouvel Observateur , serialized the book: “Incest affairs are all about silence and omerta. This one is a series of nested silences. We are at the end of the 1980s. In a family of Parisian intellectuals, a 13-year-old boy sees his stepfather, a renowned academic, invite himself to his room in the evenings. He confides this secret to his twin sister, Camille.
Incest, a crime these teens have yet to name, lasts for at least two years. Twenty years later, when they have each reached their thirties, the young woman urges her brother to finally confide this buried suffering to their mother. But she decides to protect her husband and remains silent, like the friends of the couple, prominent personalities anxious to avoid any scandal.”
"Le Consentement" ("The consent") from French writer Vanessa Springora, denouncing a prominent ... [+] t French author who has never made any secret of his preference for sex with adolescent girls and boys was at the center of a firestorm. Photo by Martin Bureau
Complicity and silence are not new to La Familia Grande. A year ago, France was rocked by the publication of Le Consentement about Gabriel Matzneff, a well-known author and admired figure of the literary French elite, and the revelation by Vanessa Springora , another writer and leading publishing director, that she was groomed into a damaging relationship from the age of 14 with the acclaimed author who was then 50.
The now 83-year-old writer Matzneff, who was once feted by Paris’s intelligentsia, found himself ostracized not just from the book’s revelations but for his writings about seducing adolescents — of which he made no secret and for which he was celebrated.
He’s now under formal investigation for pedophilia.
The debate started then about who is more to blame, the perpetrators of the crimes or the environment of complacency and moral laxity in which they move, has now been revived with ‘the Duhamel Affair’.
The two books are the authors’ efforts to break free from the secrecy that tends to surround such taboo subjects.
French writer Gabriel Matzneff who is being investigated by French police after a leading French ... [+] publishing executive detailed how he abused her when she was 14. Photo by Valery Hache
“I am revealing nothing in this book,” writes Camille Kouchner, who is a legal specialist. She has a simple formula for the ‘pact of silence’ among family and friends who were asked not to say anything: “Everyone knows.”
Duhamel started sexually abusing her brother in 1988 when he was 13, she writes, telling him that “everyone does this.”
“Everything is said, nothing is explained,” Kouchner writes. And Le Point adds: “You have to admit everything and understand everything, flee moral judgments like the plague, never show sorrow or trouble. When grandparents kill themselves. When the mother separates from the father, Bernard Kouchner, and the latter enters fully into a world of power and image with his new wife, Christine Ockrent. When the evenings of Sanary (the family’s state), take a bad turn. When Olivier Duhamel becomes master in his kingdom.”
“In France,” RTL claims in a recent editorial, “pedophilia has long enjoyed relative tolerance."
It continues that “pedophilia unfortunately affects all circles: the family, the Church, education, sport” and how after May 1968, “intellectuals even justified it in the name of the sexual revolution. After having freed the woman, the child had to be freed, ‘awakening her sexuality.’"
In the 1970s, several writers openly defended pedophilia, including Matzneff (from Le Consentement) with his book The Under 16s, but also other celebrated authors such as Tony Duvert and Guy Hocquenghem.
RTL reminds readers how in 1977, “many left-wing personalities signed a petition in Le Monde to support people charged with having had sexual relations with 13- and 14-year old teenagers. At the same time, intellectuals, such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, signed a manifesto calling for the repeal of the law on sexual majority and the decriminalization of any relationship between adults and minors under the age of 15.”
“Beyond incest, the book describes a world of alternative truths and contradictory injunctions, an environment which contemplates itself, which watches itself live and very complacently admires its supposed impertinence and its supposed freedom,” writes Le Point .
La Familia Grande is “the latest of several scandals to test French attitudes toward sexual abuse of minors,” writes The New York Times . The list includes several pedophilia and other sexual abuse scandals that began to emerge in France with the international scandal around International Money Fund Managing Director and French presidential candidate Dominique Strauss-Kahn over his sexual assault of a maid at a New York hotel in 2011.
The Financial Times also includes in the list “the 74-year-old Jean-Luc Brunel, a former French model agency boss and associate of the late sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein, who was detained last month and is being investigated for “rape of a minor over 15 and sexual harassment.”
In the tradition of literary disclosure, France 24 includes other books that “had already broken this taboo on incest:”
In 2004, the actress Catherine Allégret in A World Upside Down describes the touching of a child and the attempted rape by her step-"abusive"-father Yves Montand. The book and its author were criticized for accusing a dead person who could not defend himself.
Earlier, in 1995, Claude Ponti, author of children's books, mentions in Les Pieds Bleues sexual abuse he had suffered as a child from his grandfather.
Finally, Christine Angot made rapes committed by her father the subject of two very controversial novels, "L'Inceste" (1999) and "Un amour impossible" (2015).
According to France Info, incest remains a largely unrecognized reality in French society. "One in 20 adults in our entourage has suffered intrafamily sexual violence in his childhood," sociologist Alice Debauche of the University of Strasbourg and research associate at the National Institute of Demographic Studies told the radio network.
“This silence has a social function. It is about preserving the fable of a family which functions well and the illusion of the family as a source of development and protection of individuals. France discovered incest in the mid-1980s with highly publicized testimonies but, 35 years later, this reality is still surprising.”
With her book, Kouchner not only again has broken open the taboo of incest but triggered an investigation for "rape and sexual assault by a person in authority" by Paris prosecutors against Duhamel, who is now 70.
For L’Express , La Familia Grande “is not a whistleblower intended to deliver the author's stepfather...to popular revenge, but a first book, impressive in mastery and depth, with impeccable style. Camille Kouchner, 45, lecturer in law, produces here a literary work, a fascinating fresco of a family history as exceptional (by its protagonists) as sadly banal (by its consequences).”
““I chose to write because I could no longer keep quiet,” Kouchner said. “This book is born of a necessity: to bear witness to incest, to show that it went on for years and that it is very, very difficult to break the silence. I did not write it in the name of my brother, but for the sisters, the nieces, all those affected by incest. The omerta in a family weighs on everyone.”
And her braking of the complicit silence is having big repercussions in France, according to the New York Times : “A #MeTooInceste hashtag has taken off as tens of thousands of French victims break a silencing taboo. The book has sold more than 200,000 copies and several friends of Mr. Duhamel, including Élisabeth Guigou, a former minister of justice, have resigned prominent positions.”
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