3. The Dreyfus Affair

3.
The Dreyfus Affair

Émile Zola, “J’accuse!” (January 13, 1898)

At the close of the nineteenth century, more and more Europeans embraced militant nationalism and anti-Semitism as weapons against the struggles of modern society. The combination of these forces fueled what became a defining event of the period, the Dreyfus Affair. In 1894, a Jewish captain in the French army, Alfred Dreyfus (1859–1935), was accused of spying for Germany. A military memorandum (bordereau) discovered by a secret agent in the German embassy in Paris formed the centerpiece of the military’s case. Despite Dreyfus’s protestations of innocence, he was convicted and imprisoned on Devil’s Island. The case receded from public view for nearly two years until new evidence pointed to the real traitor, Ferdinand Walsin-Esterhazy. Forced to open an investigation, the army desperately sought a way to protect its prestige and reputation. Its efforts culminated on January 12, 1898, when a panel of military judges found Esterhazy not guilty after a two-day trial conducted behind closed doors. Among Dreyfus’s most ardent champions was French writer Émile Zola (1840–1902), who drafted the letter excerpted here in response to the trial. The day after the verdict, Zola’s letter appeared in 300,000 copies of a special edition of the Parisian newspaper L’Aurore. Because of Zola’s popularity and his willingness to name names, his letter transformed the Dreyfus case into an international affair.

From Alain Pagès, ed., The Dreyfus Affair, “J’Accuse” and Other Writings, trans. Eleanor Levieux (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996), 43–47, 50–53.

Monsieur le Président,

Will you allow me, out of my gratitude for the gracious manner in which you once granted me an audience, to express my concern for your well-deserved glory? Will you allow me to tell you that although your star has been in the ascendant hitherto, it is now in danger of being dimmed by the most shameful and indelible of stains?

You have emerged unscathed from libelous slurs, you have won the people’s hearts. You are the radiant center of our apotheosis, for the Russian alliance has been indeed, for France, a patriotic celebration. And now you are about to preside over our World Fair. What a solemn triumph it will be, the crowning touch on our grand century of diligent labor, truth and liberty. But what a blot on your name (I was about to say, on your reign) this abominable Dreyfus Affair is! A court martial, acting on orders, has just dared to acquit such a man as Esterhazy. Truth itself and justice itself have been slapped in the face. And now it is too late, France’s cheek has been sullied by that supreme insult, and History will record that it was during your Presidency that such a crime against society was committed.

They have dared to do this. Very well, then, I shall dare too. I shall tell the truth, for I pledged that I would tell it, if our judicial system, once the matter was brought before it through the normal channels, did not tell the truth, the whole truth. It is my duty to speak up; I will not be an accessory to the fact. If I were, my nights would be haunted by the specter of that innocent man so far away, suffering the worst kind of torture as he pays for a crime he did not commit.

And it is to you, M. le Président, that I will shout out the truth with all the revulsion of a decent man. To your credit, I am convinced that you are unaware of the truth. And to whom should I denounce the evil machinations of those who are truly guilty if not to you, the First Magistrate in the land? . . .

Ah, for anyone who knows the true details of the first affair, what a nightmare it is! Major du Paty de Clam arrests Dreyfus and has him placed in solitary confinement. He rushes to the home of Madame Dreyfus and terrifies her, saying that if she speaks up, her husband is lost. Meanwhile the unfortunate man is tearing out his hair, clamoring his innocence. And that is how the investigation proceeded, as in some fifteenth-century chronicle, shrouded in mystery and a wealth of the wildest expedients, and all on the basis of a single, childish accusation, that idiotic bordereau, which was not only a very ordinary kind of treason but also the most impudent kind of swindle, since almost all of the so-called secrets that had supposedly been turned over to the enemy were of no value. I dwell on this point because this is the egg from which the real crime—the dreadful denial of justice which has laid France low—was later to hatch. I would like to make it perfectly clear how the miscarriage of justice came about, how it is the product of Major du Paty de Clam’s machinations, how General Mercier and Generals de Boisdeffre and Gonse came to be taken in by it and gradually became responsible for this error and how it is that later they felt they had a duty to impose it as the sacred truth, a truth that will not admit of even the slightest discussion. At the beginning, all they contributed was negligence and lack of intelligence. The worst we can say is that they gave in to the religious passions of the circles they move in and the prejudices wrought by esprit de corps. They let stupidity have its way.

But now, here is Dreyfus summoned before the court martial. The most utter secrecy is demanded. They could not have imposed stricter silence and been more rigorous and mysterious if a traitor had actually opened our borders to the enemy and led the German Emperor straight to Notre Dame. The entire nation is flabbergasted. Terrible deeds are whispered about, monstrous betrayals that scandalize History itself, and of course the nation bows to these rumors. No punishment can be too severe; the nation will applaud the traitor’s public humiliation; the nation is adamant: the guilty man shall remain on the remote rock where infamy has placed him and he shall be devoured by remorse. But then, those unspeakable accusations, those dangerous accusations that might inflame all of Europe and had to be so carefully concealed behind the closed doors of a secret session—are they true? No, they are not! There is nothing behind all that but the extravagant, demented flights of fancy of Major du Paty de Clam. It’s all a smokescreen with just one purpose: to conceal a cheap novel of the most outlandish sort. And to be convinced of this, one need only examine the formal indictment that was read before the court martial.

How hollow that indictment is! Is it possible a man has been found guilty on the strength of it? Such iniquity is staggering. I challenge decent people to read it: their hearts will leap with indignation and rebellion when they think of the disproportionate price Dreyfus is paying so far away on Devil’s Island. So Dreyfus speaks several languages, does he? This is a crime. Not one compromising paper was found in his home? A crime. He occasionally pays a visit to the region he hails from? A crime. He is a hard-working man, eager to know everything? A crime. He does not get flustered? A crime. He does get flustered? A crime. And how naively it is worded! How baseless its claims are! They told us he was indicted on fourteen different counts but in the end there is actually only one: that famous bordereau; and we even find out that the experts did not all agree, that one of them, M. Gobert, was subjected to some military pressure because he dared to come to a different conclusion from the one they wanted him to reach. We were also told that twenty-three officers had come and testified against Dreyfus. We still do not know how they were questioned, but what is certain is that not all of their testimony was negative. Besides, all of them, you will notice, came from the offices of the War Department. This trial is a family conclave; they all belong. We must not forget that. It is the General Staff who wanted this trial; it is they who judged Dreyfus; and they have just judged him for the second time. . . .

. . . And what makes the whole business all the more odious and cynical is that they are lying with impunity and there is no way to convict them. They turn France inside out, they shelter behind the legitimate uproar they have caused, they seal mouths by making hearts quake and perverting minds. I know of no greater crime against society.

These, M. le Président, are the facts that explain how a miscarriage of justice has come to be committed. And the evidence as to Dreyfus’s character, his financial situation, his lack of motives, the fact that he has never ceased to clamor his innocence—all these demonstrate that he has been a victim of Major du Paty de Clam’s overheated imagination, and of the clericalism that prevails in the military circles in which he moves, and of the hysterical hunt for “dirty Jews” that disgraces our times. . . .

. . .

As I have already shown, the Dreyfus Affair was the affair of the War Office: an officer from the General Staff denounced by his fellow officers on the General Staff, sentenced under pressure from the Chiefs of the General Staff. And I repeat, he cannot emerge from his trial innocent without all of the General Staff being guilty. Which is why the War Office employed every means imaginable—campaigns in the press, statements and innuendoes, every type of influence—to cover Esterhazy, in order to convict Dreyfus a second time. . . . Where, oh where is a strong and wisely patriotic ministry that will be bold enough to overhaul the whole system and make a fresh start? I know many people who tremble with alarm at the thought of a possible war, knowing what hands our national defense is in! and what a den of sneaking intrigue, rumor-mongering and back-biting that sacred chapel has become—yet that is where the fate of our country is decided! People take fright at the appalling light that has just been shed on it all by the Dreyfus Affair, that tale of human sacrifice! Yes, an unfortunate, a “dirty Jew” has been sacrificed. Yes, what an accumulation of madness, stupidity, unbridled imagination, low police tactics, inquisitorial and tyrannical methods this handful of officers have got away with! They have crushed the nation under their boots, stuffing its calls for truth and justice down its throat on the fallacious and sacrilegious pretext that they are acting for the good of the country!

And they have committed other crimes. They have based their action on the foul press and let themselves be defended by all the rogues in Paris—and now the rogues are triumphant and insolent while law and integrity go down in defeat. It is a crime to have accused individuals of rending France apart when all those individuals ask for is a generous nation at the head of the procession of free, just nations—and all the while the people who committed that crime were hatching an insolent plot to make the entire world swallow a fabrication. It is a crime to lead public opinion astray, to manipulate it for a death-dealing purpose and pervert it to the point of delirium. It is a crime to poison the minds of the humble, ordinary people, to whip reactionary and intolerant passions into a frenzy while sheltering behind the odious bastion of anti-Semitism. France, the great and liberal cradle of the rights of man, will die of anti-Semitism if it is not cured of it. It is a crime to play on patriotism to further the aims of hatred. And it is a crime to worship the saber as a modern god when all of human science is laboring to hasten the triumph of truth and justice. . . .

That, M. le Président, is the plain truth. It is appalling. It will remain an indelible blot on your term as President. Oh, I know that you are powerless to deal with it, that you are the prisoner of the Constitution and of the people nearest to you. But as a man, your duty is clear, and you will not overlook it, and you will do your duty. Not for one minute do I despair that truth will triumph. I am confident and I repeat, more vehemently even than before, the truth is on the march and nothing shall stop it. The Affair is only just beginning, because only now have the positions become crystal clear: on the one hand, the guilty parties, who do not want the truth to be revealed; on the other, the defenders of justice, who will give their lives to see that justice is done. I have said it elsewhere and I repeat it here: if the truth is buried underground, it swells and grows and becomes so explosive that the day it bursts, it blows everything wide open along with it. Time will tell; we shall see whether we have not prepared, for some later date, the most resounding disaster.

. . .

But this letter has been a long one, M. le Président, and it is time to bring it to a close.

I accuse Lt-Col du Paty de Clam of having been the diabolical agent of a miscarriage of justice (though unwittingly, I am willing to believe) and then of having defended his evil deed for the past three years through the most preposterous and most blameworthy machinations.

I accuse General Mercier of having been an accomplice, at least by weak-mindedness, to one of the most iniquitous acts of this century.

I accuse General Billot of having had in his hands undeniable proof that Dreyfus was innocent and of having suppressed it, of having committed this crime against justice and against humanity for political purposes, so that the General Staff, which had been compromised, would not lose face.

I accuse Generals de Boisdeffre and Gonse of having been accomplices to this same crime, one out of intense clerical conviction, no doubt, and the other perhaps because of the esprit de corps which makes the War Office the Holy of Holies and hence unattackable.

I accuse General de Pellieux and Major Ravary of having led a villainous inquiry, by which I mean a most monstrously one-sided inquiry, the report on which, by Ravary, constitutes an imperishable monument of naive audacity.

I accuse the three handwriting experts, Messrs Belhomme, Varinard, and Couard, of having submitted fraudulent and deceitful reports—unless a medical examination concludes that their eyesight and their judgment were impaired.

I accuse the War Office of having conducted an abominable campaign in the press (especially in L’Eclair and L’Echo de Paris) in order to cover up its misdeeds and lead public opinion astray.

Finally, I accuse the first court martial of having violated the law by sentencing a defendant on the basis of a document which remained secret, and I accuse the second court martial of having covered up that illegal action, on orders, by having, in its own turn, committed the judicial crime of knowingly acquitting a guilty man.

In making these accusations, I am fully aware that my action comes under Articles 30 and 31 of the law of 29 July 1881 on the press, which makes libel a punishable offense. I deliberately expose myself to that law.

As for the persons I have accused, I do not know them; I have never seen them; I feel no rancor or hatred towards them. To me, they are mere entities, mere embodiments of social malfeasance. And the action I am taking here is merely a revolutionary means to hasten the revelation of truth and justice.

I have but one goal: that light be shed, in the name of mankind which has suffered so much and has the right to happiness. My ardent protest is merely a cry from my very soul. Let them dare to summon me before a court of law! Let the inquiry be held in broad daylight!

I am waiting.

M. le Président, I beg you to accept the assurance of my most profound respect.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. According to Zola, what motivated the army officers’ actions against Dreyfus?

    Question

    3x/xT2VIzS1mc82l1NBnrqQACzySplpZ/x9hafKEMXKrQ0YnE0XylELQW2u0J4fDkc8xRnvhJ3ozEuY5ACGRstAE//OXB41V8no7eHxyJ3jweYqXJnm0JqqfKL+3hFEbGQ+H5xuxz0RsVYz1CqmbxZIs/bEDMM+r3QQJTw==
    According to Zola, what motivated the army officers’ actions against Dreyfus?
  2. What does Zola mean when he describes Dreyfus’s conviction and Esterhazy’s acquittal as “crimes against society”?

    Question

    jWPzdW+3sJjLL2P7cGwuKev7kVog/dq9TzLS95wOYUjBUZCLjwVov/poeBcW0lw1X/YbR6u8e4uTzEzoMXScsYN+lNVxFYnWXCVW3vHuEJ+tCHHugMkgQYVAuJfqwySchFCtVIeUGSd4U49aVGTGXBhJw0VK+ROCk1j+QWDCmfAzhvgk187OjN3lPcgkDCXgksvJVyD3b56OT/pZQfrovdGu5es=
    What does Zola mean when he describes Dreyfus’s conviction and Esterhazy’s acquittal as “crimes against society”?
  3. Why do you think Zola felt compelled to publicize his views?

    Question

    eRg3nTLpIrLscwsc0DFQcGFvrz4cRL5BzF1zXtbwXIymi1VFrmdPBiGDXEdtjLTLcZcGj1YiS5gPzSehqojq+IdlE8sKwAHaSZoXH+XOGaoCjLVWW+xaJ0a3VPH4wq+V/pwucaHcjlE=
    Why do you think Zola felt compelled to publicize his views?
  4. Many scholars argue that with the rise of mass politics during the late nineteenth century, the press played an increasingly important role in everyday life. In what ways do the form and content of Zola’s letter support this argument?

    Question

    NGWPBdY46eGdVFNdmpDKuPj8vb90s/9/zUQGz3Hml6MREgFeFZGR63V8GEevUp5i9/znkTuOx2DSsEr4PnkneKWpTjJZ5qYSb31gx645I6F6XK1G2Jc8+juxZBP1Xm/6D3qjZTXwVNZV7Iz13xjc2RUMykRsmfwm1Ra4+cMfkGQnI+hCzIBp49OUouDB2pKC1jPBC5RqfPhkV749/i3EtooC6VkfM/XYyVr1jyb3HCuCpjxapfMomQnmwlhW4ZYXCCj1hFM0lrPIulEv7ds1Jhj51ysrMuRua0DwJ1E/uHj7eVBx14iUV5np6cpEODqRfs8m+KobuHoVUNbJhaf8G6Rveogp1EmIVQshfypbDpIS/gxsXRK08A==
    Many scholars argue that with the rise of mass politics during the late nineteenth century, the press played an increasingly important role in everyday life. In what ways do the form and content of Zola’s letter support this argument?