![]() ![]() My father therefore grew up in France, and then under the Vichy regime, he was in a concentration camp in Drancy. Then, they came to France with their Argentinian passports in 1925. ![]() They fled Russia and arrived in Argentina where my father was born. ![]() At the time, he was already seen as an anarchist and a communist. His father was in the Bund - that Jewish, communist, anti-Zionist organization that existed at the beginning of the 20th century, if not a little before. My father was born in 1925 in Buenos Aires. Not to try to understand yourself - you said in an interview that your father had transmitted less in terms of political history than one might think - but because, somehow, you are one of the best people to tell us about these two amazing people. ![]() Léopold Lambert: Rocé, if you don’t mind, I would like to ask you to tell us about your parents. Rocé posing with several Algerian records (2021). Cover of Par les damné.e.s de la terre curated by Rocé (2018). We talk about his illustrious parents, his rap, but also about the various projects he built around the songs of the movements of liberation on the African Continent, in Palestine, Kanaky or Viet Nam, but also within the eye of the empire, in France. We are therefore happy to begin this dossier about Music and the Revolution with him. Rocé’s rap is regularly resonating within the walls of The Funambulist’s office, and, when elaborating the contents of this issue, his name came out immediately. ![]()
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