The 1975 date places this coin a full thirty years after the Sétif and Guelma massacres of May 8, 1945, when French security forces and settler militias killed somewhere between 6,000 and 45,000 Algerians — a range that itself reflects how thoroughly the event was suppressed in French official memory. Algeria had been commemorating the date as a national holiday since independence in 1962, and the coin fits within the broader effort of the Boumédiène government to anchor the new state's identity to its anticolonial martyrology.
The 1975 date places this coin a full thirty years after the Sétif and Guelma massacres of May 8, 1945, when French security forces and settler militias killed somewhere between 6,000 and 45,000 Algerians — a range that itself reflects how thoroughly the event was suppressed in French official memory. Algeria had been commemorating the date as a national holiday since independence in 1962, and the coin fits within the broader effort of the Boumédiène government to anchor the new state's identity to its anticolonial martyrology.