Remi Chauveau Notes
A century of journeys, voices, and resilience converges to reveal the true France—built by those who crossed borders with hope and shaped the nation with courage, in a Karine Le Marchand documentary that brings their stories to life.
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đŸ‡«đŸ‡·âœš Karine Le Marchand, “Les Nouveaux Français” Shines a Light on France’s New Generation Shaped by Immigration

10 February 2026
@m6officiel AprĂšs les indĂ©pendances, le gouvernement français continue de recruter des travailleurs originaires d’AlgĂ©rie et du Maroc, notamment pour les usines automobiles, l’agriculture, le bĂątiment ou encore les services de nettoyage. Ces travailleurs ont un objectif commun : assurer un avenir meilleur Ă  leurs enfants. « Les Nouveaux Français : 100 ans d’immigration », produit et prĂ©sentĂ© par Karine Le Marchand - lundi 9 fĂ©vrier Ă  21h10 sur M6 et en streaming sur @M6+ #onregardequoi ♬ son original - M6

Les Notes Qui Relient les Mondes

In the spirit of Karine Le Marchand’s documentaries, where intimate stories reveal the hidden architecture of a nation, “Rachid” by Michel Petrucciani becomes the soulful thread running through the following article—a composition born from a man who lived between fragility and genius, a misfit whose brilliance reshaped jazz and whose music speaks a universal language; in its delicate fire, Rachid bridges the Arab world, France, Italy, and the United States, sketching the contours of a new Mediterranean where cultures meet, echo, and transform one another, reminding us that melodies—like migrations—travel freely, connect hearts, and redraw the emotional map of a country.

đŸŽ¶ 🌍 🧳 👣 🏠 đŸŽ€ 📚 đŸ’™đŸ€â€ïž đŸ”„ 🌈 đŸ‡«đŸ‡· ✹ 🌅 đŸŽ¶ 🔊 Michel Petrucciani - Rachid




🌍 “We Are All Children of Those Who Walked”

“Immigration is the story of humanity. We are all the children of those who walked, crossed, and hoped.”

This reflection from Mohed Altrad — French-Syrian entrepreneur, president of Montpellier HĂ©rault Rugby, and head of the Altrad Group — sets the perfect tone for Les Nouveaux Français: 100 Years of Immigration, the new documentary by Mathilde Gautry (Potiche Production), presented by Karine Le Marchand. Altrad’s own journey, from a Syrian desert village to becoming one of France’s most influential business leaders, mirrors the film’s central message: behind every statistic lies a human story of resilience, ambition, and reinvention. This documentary invites viewers to rediscover France through the voices of those who helped shape it.

📊 A Century in Numbers — Understanding France Through Migration

The film opens with a striking reminder: one in five people living in France today is an immigrant or the child of immigrants, representing nearly 13 million individuals. When including grandparents, that number rises to around 20 million. These figures are not presented as abstract data points but as the living backbone of the nation. Over the past century, immigration has been a constant, shaping the country’s economy, culture, and identity. The documentary traces this evolution with clarity and nuance, showing how each wave of newcomers contributed to the France we know today. It’s a century-long narrative that feels both vast and intimate.

🌐 Stories Across Continents — The Many Paths to France

What makes the documentary so compelling is the breadth of origins represented. Viewers travel from Italy to Portugal, from Greece to Armenia, from Algeria to Senegal, from Vietnam to Madagascar, from Syria to the Comoros. Each testimony reveals a different facet of the immigrant experience: the first job, the struggle with language, the nostalgia for a homeland left behind, the pride of building a new life. Children and grandchildren of migrants share memories filled with tenderness, humor, and sometimes pain. These stories, though unique, echo one another through recurring themes — work, dignity, transmission, and the hope of offering the next generation a better future.

đŸŽ€ Famous Voices, Shared Roots — When Public Figures Tell Their Story

To enrich this mosaic, the documentary features well-known French personalities whose family histories are rooted in immigration: Gérard Hernandez, Booder, Rachel Khan, Tomer Sisley, Alexis Michalik, André Manoukian, and others. Their testimonies add depth and visibility to the narrative, showing how cultural heritage shapes identity, creativity, and ambition. Whether through humor, emotion, or introspection, these figures remind viewers that behind every public success lies a private journey marked by displacement, perseverance, and reinvention. Their voices resonate alongside those of anonymous families, creating a powerful collective portrait of contemporary France.

đŸ“ș A Must‑Watch Evening — A Documentary That Redefines the French Story

Broadcast on M6 and available in replay on M6+, Les Nouveaux Français: 100 Years of Immigration is more than a documentary — it’s a necessary lens on France’s past and present. With the clarity of data, the warmth of personal stories, and the emotional weight of lived experience, the film offers a rare opportunity to understand how deeply immigration is woven into the national fabric. Karine Le Marchand guides viewers through this century-long journey with sensitivity and precision, making the documentary both accessible and profoundly moving. It’s a film that invites reflection, empathy, and a renewed appreciation for the diversity that defines France today.



#Immigration 🌍 #FrenchHistory đŸ‡«đŸ‡· #DocumentaryNight đŸ“ș #FamilyStories đŸŽ€ #CulturalHeritage ✹

France Roots

The France You Didn’t Know You Knew : A Century Told Through Courage
Les Nouveaux Français: 100 Years of Immigration is the kind of documentary that grabs you from the first testimony and doesn’t let go, revealing a France you think you know but have never seen with such intimacy. In a single hour, you hear a grandmother describe the boat that changed her life, a comedian explain how his parents’ sacrifices shaped his humor, and a French icon confess that every success he’s had traces back to a border crossed with nothing but hope. The film moves fast — one story makes you smile, the next hits you in the chest — until you suddenly realize you’re not watching “immigration stories,” but the story of France itself, told by those who built it quietly, generation after generation. It’s tender, surprising, deeply human, and it leaves you with the feeling of opening a family album you didn’t know you belonged to. A documentary that doesn’t just inform — it stays with you.

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