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Pierre Edmond de Chazal was born
in Courbevoie in Mauritius at 5am on 12 October 1895. He was a great-grandson to
both Furcy de Chazal and Edmond de Chazal. His parents, Antoine Pierre de
Chazal and Marcelle Levinville were wealthy in his youth. Edmond grew up in an
affluent and role-conscious society. From childhood he took pride in being the
senior male descendant of his grandfather Pierre Edmond and in bearing the same
name. It was the second era of global expansion of the de Chazal family.
Edmond and his five siblings, Jeanne, Raymonde, Gaston, Maurice and Elaine all
spent a major part of their lives away from Mauritius.
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Edmond was a good student, particularly in languages and
history. He was educated at Clifton and later at Cambridge University. In 1912
his family moved from Mauritius to Switzerland, having converted their property
assets to cash. Years later Edmond told his son that the intention had been to
move eventually to Bolivia to grow sugar. In September 1915, in the course of
the First World War, Edmond left University to join the British Army. It
appears that he distinguished himself with his skill in languages and confidence
in dealing with people. As an aide to very senior military and civilian figures
he gained knowledge of European and international politics. After the war,
declining to return to university, he was involved in the armistice talks and in
the establishment of the League of Nations. Later he was a liaison officer
between the British and French contingents in the Allied occupation of Berlin.
In 1922 Edmond returned to Mauritius. His father had
lost the major part of his fortune in the course of the war by "investing" in
French and Russian war bonds - Edmond was very critical of this disaster. Back
in Mauritius he appears to have come into disfavour with other family members,
probably through spending beyond his means (his son's romantic idea in later
years that the reason his father was declared a "black sheep" had involved
women - perhaps cousins in the Mauritian tradition - has failed for lack of
evidence).
In 1924 Edmond left Mauritius, travelling via Zanzibar
and Aden, arriving in Melbourne, Australia, in September. Apparently he still
had sufficient money to join in Australian society. He soon made the
acquaintance of a very wide set of people; people who were significant then and
through the next 50 years of Australian history.
Sometime before 1929 he arrived in Perth in Western
Australia. Here he met Jean (Babe) Barker, attractive 19 year old
daughter of a Perth businessman. On 30 January 1932 (a distressingly hot time
of the year in Perth) Edmond and Babe were married, somewhat to the dismay of
her family - as the marriage was suggested when the two met for morning coffee,
and was done before lunch. By this time Edmond was known as Pierre, an
easier first name for Australians to grasp. The Great Depression left Pierre
without income. For the next 9 years Pierre and Babe survived on his earnings
as a salesman and as an occasional lecturer in history.
According to Babe (now 91 and known as Jane),
their marriage was an idyllic romance. The 14 year gap in age left Pierre as the
hero in the household. Pierre loved food and Babe became an exceptional cook.
In 1932 friends encouraged the pair to open a small restaurant in the centre of
Perth. "Pierre's" was successful in its food and company, but not so
financially. Up to 50 years later chance encounters of their son with aging
strangers recounted happy memories of this restaurant. Their only son, Pierre
Edmond, was born in Perth in 1938 - to avoid confusion with the father he was
known as Edmond.
Pierre's politics appear to have been more encompassing
than those of many other members of the de Chazal family: his Australian friends
ranged from a conservative future Governor-General to communist intellectuals.
His one political obsession was support for de Gaulle.
In March 1941, during the Second World War, Pierre joined
the Australian army. However, delegated to the administration of a prisoner of
war camp for interned Italians (the internment at that time of Australian
citizens of German and Italian origin is today regarded as a disgrace in
Australia), he was unhappy and restless to serve closer to the front. He found
in 1944 a job with the British Far Eastern Broadcasting Service in New Delhi,
directing French language broadcasts for the war effort. Babe and young Edmond
remained in Perth. After the war Pierre moved to Singapore to head the
relocated French broadcasting service for BFEBS, the radio now concentrating on
Indochina. His family joined him in Singapore during 1946.
Weaned on the ideals of the League of Nations, Pierre was
committed to the objectives of the new United Nations Organisation. In 1948
Pierre joined the fledgling Food and Agricultural Organisation of the UN, the
family moving to Washington DC. In 1949 there was a another move, now as a
language specialist for the General Assembly of the UN at Lake Success in New
York. At the beginning of 1950 Pierre was appointed to the secretariat of the
UN trusteeship council for Somalia, and the family moved to
Mogadishu.
Late in 1950, while visiting a remote Somali village and
accompanied by 12 year old Edmond and by Babe (by then known as Jeanne),
Pierre ran to the rescue of his son who was being threatened by a village dog.
Pierre was bitten, the dog proved to be rabid, and treatment for Pierre was
delayed by the isolation. Many weeks later Pierre died as a consequence of
rabies. Could he have done more for the unfortunate future of Somalia but for
the intervention of mad dogs and Englishmen?
Jeanne and Edmond returned to Perth to the support of her
relations. Within five years the adolescent Edmond changed his name to
Pierre, for much the same reasons as his father - and still later became
Pierre Edmond in a quest for uniqueness!
As a pioneer de Chazal in Australia Edmond (the subject
of this article) left no memorial in industry or agriculture. His family still
describe him as the black sheep sent to the colonies, but none have yet said
precisely why. He was an oddity in Australian society, but he did not become a
part of it. Men and mothers mistrusted him; younger women were fascinated by
him. He did not regain the wealth whose trappings he longed for - the money
itself he would probably have given away, for he was a very generous person.
Instead he left a legacy of idealism, ambition, pride in the de Chazal family
and a devotion to the concept of noblesse oblige. His descendants,
without money, see knowledge as wealth and are endeavouring to make a
contribution to their nation by pioneering in new fields of knowledge.
Edmond's estrangement from his family in Europe
distressed him. Steeped in the New Church in his youth, and very conscious of
his family's continued support of that church, Edmond does not appear to have
been "externally" religious. Ironically, in the 50 years since his death he has
left one significant financial endowment: the United Nations continues to pay
Jean/Babe/Jeanne/Jane a widow's pension, in aggregate more than a million
dollars has now been paid, the same amount of their enduring fantasy "when the
ship comes home"!