THE HUGUENOT RESISTANCE
Resistez! The French word for resistance is crudely etched into the rim of a refuse hole in the Tower of Constance. Tradition has it that the word was inscribed by Marie Durand, a young Huguenot imprisoned in the Tower for her faith. She was an activist before the concept existed and the source of her activism was a fierce commitment to Jesus.
Marie was born in 1711 in the hamlet of Bouchet du Pransles in the Vivarais region in France. Her family was Huguenot, French Protestants who embraced Calvinism and could trace their Lineage back to the great Protestant hub of Geneva. Unfortunately for the Durand family, they lived at a time when it was not only unpopular but also unsafe to be a Protestant in France.
In 1685 Louis XIV of France had revoked the Edict of Nantes which had been signed into law in 1598 by the Huguenot King Henry IV. The Edict ended a protracted and bloody war between the Huguenots and the French Catholics and granted the Huguenots considerable legal rights and freedoms which they had not enjoyed up to that point. By revoking the Edict Louis XIV placed these Protestants in a crucible of sorts and many of them were killed or imprisoned. Those who evaded capture left France in droves and found refuge in nearby Switzerland or as far afield as South Africa and the Carribean. Those who remained were forced to practice