

Daniel Ali, instituteur révolté dans l'Algérie coloniale
January 1, 2012
52m
FR
Maurice Ferlet
In 1954, Daniel Vérin, a young schoolteacher of Algerian descent, made a radical decision: he turned his back on colonial France and joined the Algerian insurgents. He enlisted in the FLN, then the ALN, and became "Ali," a soldier in the struggle for independence. At the end of the war in 1962, he became an Algerian citizen. But the long-awaited independence did not bring Ali the taste of victory. On a scholarship, he went to study in the United States. Upon his return, the Algerian administration forbade him from entering his homeland. Rejected by the country he had defended, he obtained American citizenship in 1969. Condemned by France for his activism and ignored by Algeria for more than forty years, Ali was not officially recognized as a mujahid, a fighter of the Revolution, until 2004.

Daniel Ali Vérin
Self

Patty Vérin
Self

Hélène Vérin
Self


Georges Vérin
1

Georges Vérin
Self

Khadidja Mahdi
Self

Malika Rahal
Self

Bénédicte Richard
Narrator

Zohra Djazouli
Self

Abdallah Mihoubi
Self

Djilali Benali
Self

La Compagnie des Taxis-Brousse
FR

France Télévisions
FR