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France and the Holocaust

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Title: France and the Holocaust


1
France and the Holocaust
2
Historical Information
  • In 1940, the Germans invaded France. It was a
    swift defeat.
  • The Vichy Regime was set up. Vichy is a city in
    France where the government was formed. It
    lasted 2 years until 1942.
  • Marshal Henri Phillippe Petain was the head of
    the Vichy Regime, a fascistic government.

3
The Vichy Regime
  • The Vichy Regime collaborated with the Nazi
    government.
  • At first Petain had overwhelming popular support.
  • He was a hero of WWI and the people trusted him.
  • Most of the French believed it was better to be
    controlled by the Germans than by the communists
    or the Jews.
  • There is a comment to this effect in Goodbye
    Children.

4
The Vichy Regime
  • The Vichy government controlled unoccupied France
    (the south-eastern two fifths) and the colonies
    of France.
  • Over time it yielded more and more to German
    demands and grew unpopular.
  • Also evident in Goodbye Children
  • The restaurant scene shows that the Vichy
    soldiers were unpopular.

5
The Vichy Regime
  • In 1942, Petain lost power to Pierre Laval.
    Laval remained a figurehead only. He collaborated
    even more. He was an outspoken collaborator.
  • In 1942, Hitler seized all of France. He needed
    security in the west.
  • Hitler was dealing with the war against the
    Soviets in the east.

6
Pierre Laval
  • He had dictatorial powers.
  • He basically followed the orders of Hitler.
  • He agreed to draft labor for Germany.
  • The reign of terror begins. The French began to
    be sent to Germany for forced labor (not just the
    Jews, but the general population).

7
Forced Labor in Germany
  • The French forced labor was not treated as badly
    as the Jews or other undesirables.
  • Germany saw them as a valuable work force while
    the Germans fought on the front.
  • In Goodbye Children, the topic comes up only
    when the kitchen boy says they will not take him
    for forced labor because of his leg.

8
French Forced Labor
  • The policy to force the French to labor in
    Germany was a disaster.
  • As the policy was implemented, the people began
    to join the resistance movement against the
    Nazis.
  • In the movie, Julians brother speaks of joining
    the resistance.

9
Klaus Barbie
  • Famous Nazi war criminal who committee horrible
    crimes in France during the war.
  • Known as the butcher of Lyon.
  • He committed his most horrible crimes in Lyon.
  • He was a dedicated sadist, responsible for many
    individual atrocities, including the capture and
    deportation to Auschwitz of forty-four Jewish
    children hidden in the village of Izieu.

10
Klaus Barbie, Butcher of Lyon
  • His postwar notoriety is primarily due to one of
    his cases, the arrest and torture unto death of
    Jean Moulin, the highest ranking member of the
    French Resistance ever captured by the Nazis.
  • Hitler himself awarded Barbie with the First
    Class Iron Cross with Swords.

11
Klaus Barbie after the War
  • He was convicted in absence and given the death
    penalty.
  • From 1945-1955, he was protected and employed by
    American intelligence agents because of his
    police skills and anti-Communist zeal.
  • With their protection, Barbie, together with his
    wife and children, escaped to Latin America.
  • He had a long and prosperous career there.

12
Barbie in Latin America
  • He established a residence in Bolivia and became
    a citizen in 1957.
  • He lived under an alias (Klaus Alttman).
  • He worked as an interrogator and torturer for
    dictatorships both in Peru and in Bolivia.

13
Barbies Fate
  • He was wanted in France, particularly for the
    torture and death of Jean Moulin.
  • He was, however, responsible for the torture and
    death of more than 26,000 people.
  • He was identified in Bolivia in 1971 by Nazi
    hunters, but was protected by the Bolivian
    government.
  • When a moderate leftist government came to power
    in Bolivia, he was deported to France in 1983.

14
Barbies Fate
  • He was tried in Lyon in 1987.
  • He was sentenced to life imprisonment.
  • He died in prison in 1991.

15
Why did it take so long?
  • He could incriminate too many French to put him
    on trial.
  • The French did not push hard to get him.
  • After the war, the French propagated the legend
    of the French resistance.
  • Fragmented French society need to be unified. The
    legend helped to heal the wounds of war.
  • Klaus Barbie endangered this legend because he
    could show how many French helped him. He would
    have stirred up animosities and forced the French
    to confront their culpability.

16
The Allied Invasion
  • Occurred late in 1944. D-Day in Normandy.
  • Began liberation of France by the Allies.
  • 1945 Laval surrendered to the Allies.
  • He was executed for treason (the trial was highly
    criticized).
  • Petain was also convicted of treason, sentenced
    to death.
  • His sentence was commuted by Charles de Gaulle to
    life imprisonment.
  • He died in prison in 1951.
  • Still a figure of controversy in France.

17
French Resistance
  • More legend than fact.
  • It did not have the honorable motivations
    attributed to it thereafter.
  • The resistance was interested in antagonizing and
    thwarting the Germans more than in protecting the
    Jews.
  • Young men fled to the hills to escape German
    labor camps.
  • That was the real resistance.
  • Escape was a major motivation.

18
The French Resistance
  • The myth of the French resistance is so strong,
    because Charles de Gaulle wanted to unite the
    country after the war.
  • Charles de Gaulle the leader of the resistance.
  • He fled to London in 1940.
  • He organized the Free French Forces from there.
  • He was elected provisional president of France in
    1945.
  • He moved back to France after the Allies invaded.

19
France and WWII
  • France took a long time to come to terms with the
    past.
  • The truth started to come out in the 1970s.
  • France has produced most of the films on the Jew
    as Child in the Holocaust.
  • The 1970s film The Sorrow and the Pity points
    out that thousands of children were rounded up in
    France in WWII.
  • 75,000 French Jews were deported.

20
France and WWII
  • An important work on this subject is Robert
    Paxtons Vichy France and the Jews.
  • He points out that France and Bulgaria were the
    only partially sovereign states that actually
    suggested to the Germans that they round up the
    Jews.
  • At the time that Petain was in power there was a
    well-attended anti-Semitic exhibition in a Paris
    museum.

21
The Anti-Semitic Exhibition
  • The exhibit explained why collaboration was
    necessary and right.
  • In the pamphlet from the exhibition This
    exhibit shows the racial characteristics of the
    Jews. You will be enlightened about their
    penetration into our culture . . . . You will now
    understand why so many French are dead.
  • Shows anti-Semitism was alive and well in France.
    Shows collaboration in the ideology that lead to
    the Holocaust.
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