Thursday, January 8, 2009

A Moment of Epiphany

Our son came home from school with the fève yesterday. He always does.

Every year when we are packing away the Christmas decorations and Epiphany rolls around, Sebastian starts talking about the Galette des Rois and the fève, or bean, he is certain he will find inside. It’s a wonderful tradition. The galette, a pastry usually filled with frangipane, is supposed to contain one bean. Whoever gets the bean is “king” for the day. Sebastian, a six-year-old born to the purple if ever there was one, comes home with the bean and a little paper crown every year.

Of course the bean stopped being a bean more than a century ago, and was replaced by tiny ceramic figurines. In the old days they were little nativity figures, so whoever got to be king would come home with a miniature angel or Baby Jesus to put among other childhood keepsakes. Modernity being what it is, these days your child is far more likely to turn up a character from the latest Pixar film than a Biblical figure. I have to admit, that sharp little piece of ceramic lurking in my son’s dessert seems alarmingly easier to swallow than the corporate crassness of replacing Mary and Joseph with Asterix and Obelix. But the look on Sebastian’s face when he puts on his paper crown makes the risk seem worth it. He hasn’t broken a tooth yet.

Now, I’m not one to doubt my little boy’s suitability to be king every year, but I couldn’t help becoming a bit suspicious. At school they go through several of those pies every January, and Sebastian’s figurine collection is starting to pose storage problems. “I think there was more than one fève in that galette.” he ventured cautiously, interspersing his accented English with perfectly pronounced French words. “Actually, lots of kids got one.” This didn’t seem to diminish the excitement in the slightest.

When Sophia commented that the ones we buy at the supermarket have only one figurine, his highness shot us an exasperated look. “No, but Danielle’s dad made the galette for our school lunch. He must have put in lots of fèves.” He looks at his figurine proudly - this one is a somewhat sleazy-looking man in a yellow suit, with bits of almond filling still lodged under the ridge of his jacket. “Can I watch some television?”

I’ve never met Danielle’s father – unfortunately chance has dictated that I will always imagine him as a sleazy-looking man in a yellow suit – but he has made my day. Beyond the fact that our son survived yet another encounter with a school-sponsored choking hazard, I love knowing who baked Sebastian’s Galette des Rois. When I try to imagine a similar thing happening back in the US or in England, I keep running up against images of concerned parents objecting on the basis of hygiene laws, legal responsibility, child safety… Offering homemade pies from relatives of school employees – Danielle cooks the school lunches, among other things – seems to my American legal mind like a potential liability issue. Back home, perhaps it would be.

But the French, bless them, just don’t see it that way. It’s not that there is any lack of regulations. On the contrary, the French love them, and French bureaucrats are famous for wielding them with astonishing inflexibility and even a certain sinister pleasure. But, especially out here in the countryside, the law is made to be ignored if it gets in the way of more important values, like food.

This relaxed Gallic approach to rules has its downsides, as anyone who has managed to survive driving in France will appreciate. But in a tiny community like this, it’s priceless. Rules exist to guide behavior because, particularly in a large community, social norms are incapable of doing so. In a community of a few hundred people, however, where everyone knows everyone else (and, let’s be honest, is almost certainly everyone else’s cousin), the rules can be tucked in a drawer, to be pulled out only in time of need. As long as no one complains, there is no problem. No harm, no foul.

This doesn’t work in a community of strangers. Parents, as a general rule, don’t want random strangers feeding pies to their kids. But in a small community, there are no random individuals. Strange ones, perhaps, even a few scary ones. But in a village everyone is accountable to everyone. The cook in the school cantine is also your neighbor. Her husband works at your bank. Her brother-in-law is the cantonnier, the man in charge of local roadworks and other odd jobs around the village. And her father, turns out, is the guy who manages to pack all those figurines into the school’s Galettes des Rois. It’s all entre nous.

If it all sounds a little inbred and stifling, well, it can be. That guy who nearly got you killed by trying to pass you on a blind curve… before you start exploring fascinating subject of English versus French hand gestures, you may want to think twice about who he might be. Next week he could resurface as the grandson of the charming widow who lives in the farm up the road. He could be the mayor’s younger brother. Whoever he is, he is closer to you than you want him to be, and there’s not a damn thing you can do about it.

But this small town interconnectedness is also liberating. Danielle’s father is free to make his galettes for the schoolchildren. It allows Laurent the bus driver to give all the kids on his bus a piece of candy every day in symbolic defiance of his own diabetes (even in defiance of parents’ valiant but futile attempts to control how much candy their kids eat). In an age when, at least in the US, teachers cannot touch their pupils for fear of child abuse allegations, it allows Danielle to give the children hugs when they are down. In short, it paves the way for random acts of kindness.

And it means that Sebastian always gets to be king. This could be a problem…

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Greg, I have just found your blog and was charmed by your description of the 'feve' found by your son at school. No such traditions exist here in Sydney, Australia and I miss them a lot.
I also miss the silence, the fog and the snow, apart from the silence we experience out at our property 500kms away we don't get snow and rarely get fog.
Local community events are important no matter where you live and it is important to participate by turning up (like your local Christmas event). We struggle to get to our local one's but it is worth it epsecially in a small community. We now are on nodding aquaintances with a number of locals.
May I ask how did choosing holiday accomodation for a living come about? My husband and I are also looking at a change and we are always interested in how others came about by theirs'. Sorry if that sounds rude. I will continue to visit your blog.
Regards
Virginia.

Gregory Mose said...

Thanks for commenting! People almost never do, it seems. We were living in London, both lawyers, and when we decided to bail out and move to France we were very ambivalent about how to earn a living. We had a good amount of cash from selling our house, but the interest rates were low, and since we knew what families want in holiday cottages, we decided to invest our money in a big property and earn our living that way. Mixed results, i have to say - it's a very hard way to make a living. The idea was that we'd do other things on the side, but we work so hard on keeping the property in shape that it leaves very little time. I'm managing to write these days, at least! What sort of move are you contemplating? Thanks again for reading the blog!
Greg

a quasi French woman said...

Greg,

I stumbled upon you Deep In Quercy this evening while working on a blog of mine that, coincidentally, makes use of the same template as yours. Thus we can be template-cousins. I usually comment out of Halfway To France but happened to be working on blog housekeeping here.

Your post on the awkward silences in the aftermath of a French greeting faux pas snapped me to attention! I am on the cusp of leaving Southern California for central France, L'Indre, east of Poitiers, and I can only imagine the false steps I am about to make into the heavily-mined landscape of French etiquette.

I admire the courage of you and your wife to pull of stakes and set out on your own French adventure. I can only imagine how much work a guest house or cottages must be. Courage!

I'm really delighted that this amazing technology allows us to pop over to see you from any little corner of the planet that is wired for the internet. I will check back up on you. Keep up your writing and hope you are fully recovered from the flu!

Amitiés,