Gisèle Halimi
Gisèle Halimi was a Tunisian-French lawyer, feminist, and essayist.
Biography
Halimi was born in La Goulette, Tunisia, on 27 July 1927 to a Jewish mother and a Berber father. She was educated at a French lycée in Tunis, and then attended the University of Paris, graduating in law and philosophy. Her childhood and the ways in which she blends a Jewish-Muslim identity are discussed in her memoir, Le lait de l'oranger. She was first married to Paul Halimi, and then to Claude Faux. She died the day after her 93th birthday, on 28 July 2020.Career
In 1948, Halimi qualified as a lawyer and, after eight years at the Tunis bar, moved to practice at the Paris bar in 1956. She acted as a counsel for the Algerian National Liberation Front, most notably for the activist Djamila Boupacha in 1960, who had been raped and tortured by French soldiers, and wrote a book in 1961 to plead her case. She also defended Basque individuals accused of crimes committed during the conflict in Basque Country, and was counsel in many cases related to women's issues, such as the 1972 Bobigny abortion trial, which attracted national attention.In 1967, she chaired the Russell Tribunal, which was initiated by Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sartre to investigate and evaluate American military action in Vietnam.
In 1971, she founded the feminist group Choisir to protect the women who had signed the Manifesto of the 343 admitting to having illegal abortions, of which she was one. In 1972 Choisir formed itself into a clearly reformist body, and the campaign greatly influenced the passing of the law allowing contraception and abortion carried through by Simone Veil in 1974.
In 1981, she was elected to the French National Assembly, as an independent Socialist, and was 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.
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 | |||
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 |