ArtView December 2013 | Page 12

political content, The Crab with the Golden Claws. number of times, and briefly imprisoned, though he Throughout the occupation, his stories would lean was never formally charged as a collaborator. It was towards escapist entertainment, avoiding likely his status, as the creator of beloved children’s confrontation with events in the real world. Some of character Tintin, that helped to protect him from the his best-loved works came out in this period, harsher punishment dealt out to many of his including The Secret of the Unicorn and Red colleagues. Rackham's Treasure. Still, as a person who had been associated with the tainted Le Soir, he was under a ban from working on any Belgian publications for two years. During that time he was not able to produce any new Tintin adventures. The ban lasted until publisher Raymond Leblanc, a former resistance fighter, came to his rescue. He helped Hergé to obtain a “certificate of good citizenship.” Leblanc’s credentials as a patriot were beyond question. He argued that many Belgians, like himself, had enjoyed reading Tintin during the war as an escape from the hardships of occupation, and a boost for Tintin battles Dr Müller in Land of Black Gold morale. With the support of Leblanc, Hergé launched Tintin magazine, where the adventures of While Hergé was producing these delightful stories, Le Soir remained under Nazi control. On its the daring reporter would continue. Yet the shadow over Hergé’s reputation never front page it trumpeted the victories of the entirely vanished. After all, he had knowingly and Wehrmacht. Oblivious to the Nazi propaganda willingly worked on a publication that served the appearing in the same paper, the adventures of Nazi machine. Though he had not produced any Tin tin continued. Hergé was half-way through The explicit propaganda, his charming comic-strip Seven Crystal Balls in September 1944, when the helped to boost its circulation. The suspicions allies liberated Brussels. directed at Hergé seemed to gain credence from the The Germans fled, and the hunt began for racist attitudes shown in some of his earlier work, anyone suspected of collaborating with the especially his second book, the notorious Tintin in occupiers. Those who worked for the Nazi- the Congo. In this story the Africans are presented controlled press were prosecuted with special zeal. as gross caricatures, inferior in every way to the Many were imprisoned, some were executed. As a Belgian colonists who ruled over them. The attitude member of the editorial staff on Le Soir, Hergé was to the environment is also far from enlightened – in a dire situation. He was arrested and questioned a Tintin slaughters the local wildlife for sport, and at