- Union sacrée
L'union sacrée (French for "Sacred Union") was a truce in France to which the left-wing agreed, during
World War I , of not opposing the government nor starting any strike. Made in the name ofpatriotism , it opposed theSFIO 'sinternationalism and its late former leaderJean Jaurès ' pledge not to enter any "bourgeois war." Although an important part of theSocialist movement joined the "Union sacrée", sometrade union ists such asPierre Monatte opposed it.On the first of August, 1914, the
President of the French Republic ,Raymond Poincaré , declared war on Germany. Three days later,Prime Minister Rene Viviani made a speech::"« Dans la guerre qui s'engage, la France […] sera héroïquement défendue par tous ses fils, dont rien ne brisera devant l'ennemi l'union sacrée »" :"(« In the coming war, France will be heroically defended by all its sons, who in a sacred union will not break in the face of the enemy »)."
This political movement may have been an attempt to create solidarity during a time when the largely pacifist
French Socialist Party threatened a general strike and FrenchCatholic s felt slighted by the1905 French law on the separation of Church and State . Elements of nationalism (see "August Madness" inWorld War I ), anti-Germanpropaganda and loss of the former French territory ofAlsace-Moselle after 1870 (revanchism ) may have been used to strengthen the movement.By any measure the movement was success: the French
mobilization went forward and there was less than 1.5% of Frenchdefection s during that time.Fact|date=April 2007See also
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Burgfrieden , German equivalent
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