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France's motto of "liberte, egalite, fraternite" - liberty, equality and fraternity - represents key challenges dividing the nation today. The 麻豆社's Paris correspondent Lucy Williamson travels around the country to find out more about the issues and asks: are President Macron's policies helping to heal these divisions, or make them worse? "Fraternite鈥 requires French citizens to be treated with 鈥渂rotherliness鈥, regardless of origin, background or religion. And la茂cit茅 鈥 separation of state and religion 鈥 is seen today as a key tool to ensure that. But there are battles over where the line between state and religion, public and private, really is 鈥 and most of the time, it鈥檚 about the Muslim headscarf. With little of France's ethnic or religious diversity on display in public life, and a ban on the French state collecting this kind of data on its citizens, how is its model of integration working in modern-day France? Former World Cup-winning football player Lilian Thuram argues that some people are happy with the racist status quo. Lucy travels to the city of Marseille, famed as a "melting pot" for its diversity - and its football team - to look at what keeps the city together, and why divisions are appearing even there. Producer: Arlene Gregorius
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