France's education minister, Edouard Geffray, has announced a compensation proposal to the widow of teacher Caroline Grandjean, following an inquiry that found institutional failure after her suicide in September 2025. The case, involving homophobic harassment, has stirred strong emotions in the teaching community. The widow reacted by describing the financial offer as an attempt to silence her.
Caroline Grandjean, a 42-year-old teacher, took her own life on September 1, 2025, in the Cantal region, after enduring harassment related to her homosexuality since September 2023. Insulting graffiti such as 'sale gouine' and 'gouine = pédophile' had been found on the walls of her school in Moussages, a village of 200 residents. A judicial investigation opened at the time was closed without follow-up in March 2025 due to lack of new evidence, according to the prosecutor's office.
On sick leave, the teacher had been offered a position nearby for the new school year but was unable to return to work. Her wife, Christine Grandjean-Paccoud, filed a complaint against the education ministry for harassment.
An administrative inquiry, published on February 6, 2026, concluded there was an 'institutional failure in the support' provided to Caroline Grandjean. The report highlights a perceived lack of institutional backing against conflicts with some parents, as well as administrative decisions viewed as unfair, such as the denial of bonus points linked to her disability (RQTH) for mobility.
Questioned in the National Assembly on February 10, 2026, Minister Edouard Geffray stated: 'I will make a compensation proposal to Mrs. Paccoud-Grandjean.' The ministry told AFP that this could involve financial compensation, with discussions forthcoming between the widow's lawyer and the relevant services.
The minister described the situation as a 'juridico-administrative, or even bureaucratic, handling of a dramatic case,' stemming from a series of 'micro-decisions' with no identified individual fault. He emphasized the need to humanize administrative procedures in a ministry employing 1.8 million staff.
Christine Grandjean-Paccoud responded on Ici Pays d’Auvergne radio: 'I receive this financial compensation like “we're going to give money to this little lady, and maybe she'll stop.” Money is so little compared to what I've lost. It's not with money that they'll silence me. I'll shout until those responsible are recognized.'