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Joséphine Baker To Be The First Black Woman To Enter France’s Panthéon

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American-born French performer Joséphine Baker will be entered into Paris’ Panthéon mausoleum, making her the first black woman to receive the honour.

She will be just the sixth woman to join some 80 national heroes. The government stated that Baker will be inducted into the monument in November. The Panthéon is a burial for celebrated French icons such as scientist Marie Curie and writer Victor Hugo.

Born in St Louis, Missouri in 1906, Baker rose to international stardom in the 1930s after moving to France to pursue a career in show business. She was also a resistance fighter for her adopted country France during World War Two and had a role in the civil rights movement in the US. Her induction into the Panthéon recognises her contribution to the performing arts and her courage in actively resisting Nazi Germany during the war.

While her body will remain buried in Monaco, she will be honoured on 30 November with a memorial with a plaque by one of her children, Claude Bouillon-Baker. French President Emmanuel Macron approved Baker’s induction after a campaign led by her family and a petition with about 38,000 signatures. The family has been requesting her induction since 201e but only the president can approve entrants to the monument. Thanking the president on Sunday, government minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher stated that Baker was “a great lady who loved France.”

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