10.07.09
St Louis Adult Entertainment: Immigrant Muslims in Belleville
But the narrow streets of Belleville are also packed with people of Chinese, Jewish, sub-Saharan African and middle-class French origin. A class of children pours out of a kindergarten: toddlers of four different colours hold hands while their teachers issue commands in French.
The Moroccan novelist Abdellah Taïa lives in the Belleville building on whose steps, according to legend, Edith Piaf was born. (In truth, “The Little Sparrow” was born in a local hospital.) “I’m even overjoyed to go to McDonald’s,” says Taïa, as he pours a version of Moroccan mint tea reinvented by a posh French tea house. “The servers are white, black, Arab, Chinese.
It’s almost too philosophical-existential an experience, to see this mélange”. On Taïa’s street, the vagrants are French, Algerian and Portuguese. There is a café for white creative types run by Arabs and frequented in the mornings by Chinese businessmen. By the metro around the corner, older Arab men consort with Chinese prostitutes.
See the full article from “EuropeNews”