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Signes National Cemetery

Cérémonie du 18 juillet 2012. Collection ONACVG

 

Click here to view the cemetery's information panel vignette Signes

 

Purchased for the symbolic price of one franc, the land in the hamlet of Vallon des Martyrs, in the commune of Signes, became a national cemetery in 1996. Officially opened on 25 June that year by the Minister for Veterans and Victims of War, it remembers the 38 members of the Resistance who were executed on the site in July-August 1944. Covering 1.33 acres, this cemetery does not contain bodies as such, but an ossuary and 38 individual tombstones.

The Resistance in the southern zone

In the summer of 1940, individuals and small groups protested against the Occupation and criticised the political orientations of the newly established French State. Gradually, movements and networks of resistance developed in unoccupied Provence, as in the rest of the country.

In November 1942, the Germans crossed the demarcation line and invaded the Free Zone. The Resistance was reinforced with new members and developed armed operations against the Occupier.

On 26 January 1943, on the initiative of Jean Moulin, the three main movements in the southern zone (Combat, Libération Sud and Franc Tireur) joined forces to become Mouvements Unis de la Résistance (MUR). They established a highly structured underground organisation comprising various different branches, including the Armée Secrète (AS), Noyautage des Administrations Publiques (NAP), Recrutement-Organisation-Propagande (ROP) and Organisation Universitaire (OU). In mountainous areas, where many took refuge from compulsory labour service (STO), maquis (rural resistance groups) were formed, issuing from the MUR, FTP (Francs-Tireurs et Partisans) or ORA (Organisation de Résistance de l’Armée). Between December 1943 and February 1944, the various armed forces of the Resistance came together to form the Forces Françaises de l’Intérieur (FFI).

In 1944, the Resistance in the southern zone prepared to liberate the territory. Departmental Liberation Committees (CDLs) were set up. Following the Allied landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944, repression by the German Army, the Gestapo and the Milice was stepped up, particularly against the maquis founded in June in the Provence region.

 

The executions of July and August 1944

In summer 1944, a betrayal led to the arrest by the Gestapo of large numbers of Resistance members in the R2 region (present-day Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur). These included, on 16 July 1944, the vast majority of members of the Comité Départemental de Libération des Basses-Alpes, who were gathered in Oraison. Others were called in for questioning or paid a visit at their homes. After being subjected to interrogation and torture at the Gestapo headquarters in Marseille, 425 rue Paradis, they were transferred to Les Baumettes prison.


On 18 July, after a sham trial, 29 of these men were killed by firing squad in an isolated valley in the Signes woods. On 12 August, nine others were executed on the same site. The bodies were buried where they lay.


The discovery of this mass grave in September 1944 revealed the brutality of the executions: some were buried alive and quicklime was scattered on the bodies, making some of them unrecognisable. Among the victims, it was possible to identify members of the various Resistance movements and organisations, including the chairman of the Basses-Alpes Departmental Liberation Committee (CDL), several members of the Mouvements Unis de Résistance (MUR), Organisation Universitaire (OU) and Noyautage des Administrations Publiques (NAP), the head of the French Forces of the Interior (FFI) for Region 2, the Regional Military Delegate (DMR), young officers of the Free French Forces (FFL), a member of the British Special Operations Executive and a US officer.


In the Signes woods, the Nazis inflicted heavy losses on the Provençal Resistance, depriving it, on the eve of the Provence landings, of a number of its leaders.

On 21 September 1944, a national funeral was held at Saint Pierre cemetery in Marseille, presided over by Raymond Aubrac, then regional Commissioner of the Republic, and attended by civilian, military and religious leaders. Since then, on 18 July each year, a ceremony has been held in this “Valley of the Martyrs” turned national cemetery, in memory of those 38 members of the Resistance who were executed here.

 

Cérémonie du 18 juillet 1945

Ceremony of 18 July 1945. Chiny collection

 

Those executed at Signes

  • Marcel ANDRÉ

44, headmaster – CDL Basses-Alpes

  • André AUNE

45, broker– departmental head, AS Bouches-du-Rhône

  • Georges BARTHÉLEMY

37 ans – Lieutenant FFI

  • Lucien BARTHÉLEMY

40, sales representative – France au Combat

  • Charles BOYER

59, lawyer – France au Combat

  • Albert CHABANON

29, teacher – regional head, OU

  • Henri CHANAY

30, French officer – head of inter-Allied mission (acting DMR)

  • Roger CHAUDON

36, head of farming cooperative – SAP Basses-Alpes

  • Georges CISSON

34, highways authority engineer – regional head, NAP

  • Paul CODACCIONI

55, inspector-general, PTT – regional head, NAP-PTT

  • François CUZIN

29, philosophy teacher – CDL Basses-Alpes

  • André DAUMAS

44, doctor – doctor, FFI Basses-Alpes

  • Jean-Pierre DUBOIS

49, decorator – MLN

  • Léon DULCY

32, doctor – British SOE

  • Guy FABRE

19, student – OU

  • Maurice FAVIER

27, town hall secretary – CDL Basses-Alpes

  • Paul KOHLER

44, head mechanic – NAP SNCF

  • Pierre-Jean LAFFORGUE

29, French officer – ORA

  • Émile LATIL

41, painter – CDL Basses-Alpes

  • Jean-Louis LESTRADE

20, student – OU

  • Maurice LEVY

32, adman – intelligence agent, OSS

  • Jean LIBERT

20 – head of MLN liaison service

  • René MARIANI

22, student – OU

  • Louis MARTIN-BRET

46, head of cooperative – leader, MLN, and chairman, CDL Basses-Alpes

  • Jules MOULET

45, entrepreneur – head, NAP Bouches-du-Rhône

  • Jean M. MUTHULAR

34, US officer – Inter-Allied Mission, OSS

  • Francis NINCK

30, French officer – sector commander, AS Marseille

  • Léon PACAUD

31, French officer – FFL

  • François PELLETIER

23, French officer – BCRA, FFL

  • Jean PIQUEMAL

39, nurse – CDL Basses-Alpes

  • Terce ROSSI

28, mechanic – agent, FTP Basses-Alpes

  • Robert ROSSI

31, French officer – regional head, FFI

  • Georges SAINT-MARTIN

20, student – FFI (Robert Rossi’s secretary)

  • Robert SALOM

18, student – agent, FTP Basses-Alpes

  • André WOLFF

44, notary – OU

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Practical information

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Signes

Maurice Genevoix

1890-1980
© Famille Genevoix

Maurice Genevoix by himself

 

Maurice Genevoix was born on 29 November 1890 in Decize (Nièvre), a “little town straddling the Loire”.

His distant forebears were devout Swiss Catholics, who had fled the Calvinist repression, taking refuge in France. Hence their surname, Genevois (“native of Geneva”), the “s” later being replaced by the Limousine “x”. Maurice’s father, Gabriel Genevoix, the son and grandson of a chemist, was himself a business agent. He settled in Châteauneuf-sur-Loire shortly after marrying, and took over his sick father-in-law’s wholesale grocery business.

My mother was twenty when I came into the world. It was in her arms that I drifted, a year later, to Châteauneuf. To drift [Genevoix uses the obscure French word valer, a sailor’s term], meaning to go with the flow, to entrust oneself to the current and, symbolically, to fate.

He was to remain in Châteauneuf for many years. There, he and his younger brother, René, born in 1893, lived the happy, carefree years of true, eager childhood, “given to them completely”. Those years moulded his budding sensibility and introduced him, day after day, to “an eternally virgin, wondrous, endlessly blossoming world”.

Life moved, for me, at the pace of childhood, making each day a small eternity.

That “world” was also the world of the “Asile”, the nursery school he was sent to from the age of 22 months, followed by the “big school”, the village primary where he wore the cross that rewarded the good pupils – though that did not stop him from being a “hot-headed” child.

We were impossible, due to sheer vitality. On my way back to school after lunch, long before I reached rue du Mouton I could hear, over the rooftops, the shouts of a hundred prepubescent voices. And I would start running.

All ‘pupils’, all in black aprons, all in it together, all equal before the secular prophets; and yet as different as their citizen parents.

He would speak often of his family life in Châteauneuf, of his mother Camille, tender and cheerful, of the “shop” where he discovered the sounds and smells of life, and the three houses in which he lived.

As my child’s personality was awakened, my own way of perceiving and feeling, I threw myself hungrily into the world that was offered to me. I discovered the street, the gardens, the people in their shops and workshops, the riverbanks too, the paved quaysides where the heavy mooring rings lay sleepily beneath the weeds and the rust, the tarred fishermen’s skiffs, the shoals of bleak turning over in the soapy swirl at the back of the wash house.

I consider it more than ever a great privilege to have spent my childhood in a little pre-war French town.”

But it would all change when, aged 11, he was sent away to boarding school in Orléans, 20 km away, for seven years.

For the first time, I found myself enrolled: number 4. Life as a boarder at a French state lycée in the early years of this century was not unlike life in the army. All that is evoked by the word ‘barracks’, I experienced it there, aged 10, at Lycée Pothier, on rue Jeanne d’Arc, in Orléans: a cold, noble street, straight as a ruler, drawn rigorously taut between rue Royale and the cathedral of Sainte-Croix.

He found consolation in his great liking for camaraderie, his talent for drawing and a love of reading, which opened up a whole other world to him. Jules Verne bored him, but he was full of enthusiasm for Hector Malot’s Sans famille, before immersing himself in London, Kipling, Daudet, Dumas and, above all, Balzac, who left him “flabbergasted. How shocking!” And he longed for only one thing: Sundays and the holidays, when he would regain his freedom and the warmth of family life.

But in 1903, at the age of 12, he lost his mother.

On 14 March 1903, an early spring morning of indescribable magnificence, I was called to the headmaster’s office in the middle of class. He ‘prepared’ me, if I dare put it that way. Uncomfortable, certainly pitiable, he perhaps hesitated to deal me the blow outright. But from the very first moment, the look in his eyes and his faltering voice plunged me into the corrosive depths of despair, a gasping teenager suddenly faced with the hardest thing of all.

That teenager who, when the summer holidays came, wandered endlessly along the banks of the Loire found, in Châteauneuf, a house in darkness and a father overcome by grief, whose sadness, growing deeper by the day, caused him to make demands which a boy so close to childhood could not recognise or understand. The intense hunger for freedom which boarding school silently aroused in his subconscious drove him to an intolerance which the grieving man could not tolerate. So he fled, disappointing a call that refused to be expressed.

Since then... I know, I have learnt, it is a certain world order that has no use for the death of a young woman or a child. But I also know full well that my revolt was a man’s thing, that my refusal, beyond that closed grave, was what justified my own survival, my acceptance of the world, of the beauty of the dawn and the evening, the purity of the air we breathe, the children I myself would have. For how many years did I wake at night, my heart beating with joy, my ears still buzzing with the sound of a voice that had just called me, my hands warm from clutching my mother’s hands? My face was wet with tears, sweet tears, even after waking. Old man that I had become, I refound a young mother, smiling and tender; it was her, today once more, after the hardships of the years, who rekindled deep in my heart the invincible love for life that would only be extinguished with my death.

Maurice Genevoix was a brilliant pupil, and his father decided he should continue his studies. “Early on, when I was 13 or 14, I was tormented by the need to express myself, to write.

He left Orléans to do university preparatory classes at the Lycée Lakanal in Sceaux, “which had grounds where we could smoke pipes and a family of deer, penned in, just like us.”

Though not work-shy, he remained eager for freedom and, readily rebellious, jumped over the fence every morning to go and have a cup of coffee at the bar-tabac in Bourg-la-Reine.

In 1911, he was awarded a place at the prestigious École Normale Supérieure, on rue d’Ulm, in Paris, but decided to do his military service first. He was assigned to the 144th Infantry Regiment. Yet, contrary to what you might think, he did not find this year of “military servitude” a hardship.

All in all, (...) compared to the servitude of the lycée, (it) left me with the memory of a happy liberation, dotted with comic episodes.”

He even refers enthusiastically to his period with the battalion of Joinville.

Those weeks, that year, were definitely among the happiest of my life. Excitement, harmony, challenges set oneself, the simple daily happiness of discovering, with wonder, that the resources of one’s body were still equal to the bold behaviour of one’s youth.”

At the École Normale, between 1912 and 1914, he was a student of the director, the historian Ernest Lavisse, who, in 1916, would write the foreword to his first book, Sous Verdun (English title: ’Neath Verdun).

The university, with its open forums, its free choices, its abundance, its contrasting individuals, was a continuation, on a different level, of the enchantments of my early youth.”

The irony, the refusal to be taken in, the virtuosity of a critical mind put through unremitting training... The best of what I owe the (École) Normale, I owe to the normaliens.”

He owed it also to two men: Paul Dupuy, the École’s general secretary, with whom he was to exchange almost daily correspondence for thirty years, and Lucien Herr, the librarian, “who knew everything and gave everyone the key to what they were looking for.”

Dupuy and Herr (…) remain, in my eyes, the guardians and examples of an oft forgotten, or little-known, humanity, whose decline or abandonment is not a credit to the times in which we live.”

In 1913, for his diploma of higher studies, he presented a noteworthy thesis on “Realism in Maupassant’s novels”, which appeared to promise him a brilliant university career.

“First in my year, I saw the avenues of an easy university career open up before me. I had already chosen from among them, at least virtually. I did not feel cut-out to be a high-school teacher. If I was to teach, it would have to be students close to my age. If I had an interest in arousing curiosity, I wanted to be free from constraint, without the worry of having to get through a syllabus in the year. For that reason, upon graduation, I intended to apply for posts at foreign universities.”

The outbreak of war prevented him from sitting his teaching examination. Mobilised on 2 August 1914, he joined the 106th Infantry Regiment, as a second lieutenant, in Châlons-sur-Marne. He left, with no flower in his rifle, saddened to the core, but at the same time “curious; intensely, entirely open and receptive, interested to the point of forgetting my apprehension and my fear.”

But within a few weeks, “this tremendous melee, which remained monstrously in human proportions”, plunged him into a world of blood, pain and horror.

Everything, always: rain on the pallid back of a dead man, shells that bury and unearth, that roar, and howl with strange shrillness, giving out horrible, cheerful sniggers.

More and more frequently, as our fatigue grows, feverish images burst forth with the explosions: springing up, whole bodies in tatters; falling against the parapet, backs broken, like Legallais; headless, the head ripped off in one go, like Grandin’s, Ménasse’s, Libron’s, which rolled back to us from the neighbouring shell-hole in its brown woollen balaclava; scattering from mound to mound these sticky little things that you could reach out your hand and gather up; where do they come from, and what were their names? Desoigne? Duféal? Or Moline?

It scarcely leaves us now; we feel our chests squeezed, as if by an almost immobile hand. Against my shoulder, Bouaré’s shoulder starts trembling, gently, interminably, and somewhere a moan rises up from entrails of the earth, a regular groaning, a kind of soft, slow singing. Where is it? Who is it? There are men buried nearby. We search; it distracts us.

He took part in the Battle of the Marne and the march on Verdun. After four months at Les Éparges, his battalion was sent to the “Calonne trench”, a strategic forest road the ran along the Hauts de Meuse hills. There, on 25 April 1915, he was hit by three bullets in the arm and chest, severing his humeral artery. He was evacuated to Verdun hospital, then on to Vittel, Dijon and Bourges. For him, the war was over. After seven months of treatment, he was discharged with 70% invalidity.

In August 1916, he returned to Paris, to work as a volunteer for the Franco-American Fatherless Children of France Society and, at Paul Dupuy’s invitation, lodged at the École Normale. But he rejected the suggestion put to him by the school’s new director, Gustave Lanson, to resume his studies with a view to sitting his teaching examination.

Monsieur, we have changed a lot. In all ways, in fact. Morality, culture, justice, all that the word civilisation stood for we have had to call into question.

Paul Dupuy had been encouraging him for months to write a book based on his memories of the war, which he had recorded in little notebooks. That book was to be Sous Verdun. Written in just a few weeks, with a foreword by Ernest Lavisse, it was published in 1916, heavily censored. That first book was followed by Nuits de guerre (1917), Au Seuil des Guitounes (1918), La Boue (1921) and Les Éparges (1923). All these titles received unanimous praise, and were subsequently brought out in a single volume, Ceux de 14.

Genevoix wrote these war memoirs at Châteauneuf. He had left Paris on doctor’s orders, having had Spanish flu. But what was prescribed to him had soon “become a free choice”. In Châteauneuf, with his father, he was “overjoyed” to rediscover his childhood haunts, where nothing had changed in his absence. Thus, after being a “war writer”, he went on to depict the region of the Loire, with a first novel, Rémi des Rauches (1922), about returning to civilian life and being reunited with the river, his world of light. It was nonetheless a continuation of his wartime writings.

“Rémi des Rauches is from 1922; I wrote it after La Boue and before Les Éparges (...) Yet although at no point does it evoke the war, or even mention it by name, it is still a war book.”

But the river was at once soothing and liberating, and from then on he would never stop celebrating it.

It was the Loire. Mistress of all the passing hours, mirror of the moonlight and the star-filled nights, of the pink mists on April mornings, the thin clouds streaking the September sunsets, the long beams of sunlight piercing the summer clouds, she took that evening and, with each passing moment, carried it gently away, on her tranquil currents, into the night.” 

In 1925, aged 35, Genevoix published Raboliot, which won the Prix Goncourt.

What a fine book!”  wrote the jury. “A fine book, filled with aromas, vigour, humanity... A simple, clear and lucid style, in which the slightest details are expressed exactly, the colour of the leaves, the shades of the horizon; the extreme precision of his eye, the perfect, succinct comparisons, in a word his admirable descriptive talent... The wonderful unity of the book, too, for, from beginning to end, the author goes straight to what he wants, what he feels: phrases at once fluid and energetic, rounded, shaped... Yes, it is a great book.

To write it, he lived for weeks on a hunting ground bought by his uncle, “between Sauldre and Beuvron”.

Adjoining a birch wood, surrounded by fish ponds and overlooking the lovely Clousioux lake, frequented by buzzards and herons, what could have been a better base for my writing projects than Trémeau’s gamekeeper’s cottage? I spent days there, nights too, with not an empty hour, not a dull moment: an osmosis between the land and me, the meadows of sedge, the sparse round oaks in the fine mist of the Beuvron, the yapping of a fox on a scent, the call of a bittern in the rushes, the breaking day, the first star, the leap of a carp, the gliding flight of a hunting buzzard.”

Yet he encountered no model for a poacher. Alone, or with the gamekeepers, he learnt to ring the bell, to do the rounds with the lantern, to lay the snares. A free man, he was against all forms of “regimentation” – a word he would use often – to the point of preferring rebels and dissenters. From Raboliot to the great red stag of La Dernière Harde (English title: The Last Hunt), his entire oeuvre extols freedom considered as a natural asset.

The instinct of freedom (...) has always guided my choices like a good, reliable companion.”

During those years – 1925, 1926, 1927 – success, far from distancing Genevoix from the land of his birth, gave him the means to settle on the banks of the Loire, in a house to his liking. He found it by chance, one day in 1927, when strolling around Saint-Denis-de-l’Hôtel: a little country cottage, “abandoned by humans but peopled by birds and plants, which thrived there undisturbed.” It was called “Les Vernelles”. “I left the nests alone, those of the redstarts under the eaves, the blackbirds in the hedges, the lesser whitethroats in the bushy willows of the bank. From there, day after day for twenty years, I watched the sky change with the colours of the seasons, and listened to the bells of Jargeau answer those of Saint-Denis. I return there each year to see the wild strawberries ripen, until the time when the parasol mushrooms raise their hats beneath the acacias and the grass fires, smoking through the valley, announce the flight of the migratory birds.

After the death of his father, who succumbed to a brief bout of pneumonia in July 1928, Genevoix decided to spend the rest of the summer at Les Vernelles. He stayed there with Angèle, who had been in the family’s service since 1898. With them they took a cat, who was so taken with the charms of Les Vernelles that, when they returned to Châteauneuf in September, it made its own way back to Saint-Denis-de-l’Hôtel. From this domestic anecdote, Genevoix was to make a novel, Rroû (1931), recently reprinted with a foreword by Anne Wiasensky. The book, together with La Boîte à pêche (1926; English title: The Fishing Box), marked the beginning of a particular kind of production by Maurice Genevoix: his romans-poèmes, or “novel-poems”. These included Forêt voisine (1933), La Dernière Harde (1938), Routes de l’aventure (1959) and Bestiaires (Tendre bestiaire and Bestiaire enchanté in 1969, Bestiaire sans oubli in 1971), much of them written at Les Vernelles.

In early 1939, two months after the death of his first wife, he left Les Vernelles on a trip to Canada, where he gave a series of conferences over several months. He was to stay there until the eve of the war. The lover of the banks of the Loire was not looking for a change of scene on this trip, but rather to find “harmony within himself”. Upon his return to France, he published his travel notes (Canada, 1943) and went on to devote a number of books to that country: first, a collection of short stories, Laframboise et Bellehumeur (1942), then a novel, Eva Charlebois (1944). Canada was present, too, in Les Routes de l’Aventure (1959) and in his children’s short stories, L’hirondelle qui fit le printemps (1941) and L’Ecureuil du Bois-Bourru (1947).

Of all the countries I have been on my travels, Canada appealed to me the most (...). It presented me with themes which of their own accord were in harmony with my inner world.”

In 1940, he left Les Vernelles for the Free Zone and spent the next two years in a village in Aveyron. There he wrote La Motte rouge (1946), a grim novel about intolerance and the Wars of Religion, which cannot be read without the key of the Occupation, as suggested in its epigraph: “It was a wretched and devastating time.”

He also wrote a “journal of humiliating times” there, which disappeared in the turmoil and was only recovered much later. There he met his second wife, Suzanne Neyrolles, a widow herself and mother of a little girl, Françoise.

After the invasion of the southern zone by the Germans, the three of them returned to Les Vernelles. But the house had been ransacked. He thought of selling it, but Suzanne set about restoring it to its former glory. Their daughter, Sylvie, was born there on 17 May 1944.

She would laugh and lift her eyes to me, to witness her joy, entirely accepting of the world, its wonders and their miraculous inrush. What is love if it does not share, does not accept what it receives with the same movement with which it offers and gives?

The war over, he resumed his travels and conference tours, which this time took him to Europe, the United States, Mexico and Africa (Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Senegal, Mauritania, Guinea, Nigeria). After Canada, Africa sparked his creative imagination. Afrique blanche, Afrique noire, a book of travel impressions, was published in 1949 and the novel Fatou Cissé, also inspired by Africa, in 1954.

He was attentive to the wide-ranging problems faced by these countries, including their political aspects. But for him, travel was above all an opportunity to discover a diversity of landscapes and customs and, beyond that, to recognise different ways of living, being and thinking, which he described as universal.

I approached other cultures, perceived their genuine warmth and felt stir within me a feeling of human brotherhood, which had been awakened by my travels among real men.

Elected to the Académie Française in 1946, to the seat of Joseph de Pesquidoux, he was invested on 13 November 1947, by André Chaumeix.

One never enters here alone... For men of my age, there are, among the dead, those who have kept, and will keep forever, the face of youth. Of those young war dead, we, in our own youth and our mature years, have been painfully deprived.

I regard as a moving privilege that I was lucky enough to freely encounter, over a third of a century, men so wholly and diversely men as most of my colleagues. I have greatly admired many of them, respected them all and formed friendships with some which are the pride of my life.

In October 1958, he became Perpetual Secretary. He dusted down the venerable institution, set it up with great literary prizes and worked to enable the election of Paul Morand, Julien Green, Montherlant, etc.

He also made sure the Académie played an active role in all the bodies responsible for the defence of the French language. Under his leadership, it asserted its presence and competence within the High Commission for the French Language, founded in 1966, and the International Council for the French Language.

He would go to Les Vernelles as often as possible, to spend “days on (his) personal work”, but he now had to limit himself to shorter works. Among his short stories for children, Le Roman de Renard (1958; English title: The Story of Reynard) playfully made “the beasts talk” but, as a literary metaphor, it was also an ode to freedom.

It is a tough, unending struggle for those wishing to safeguard their freedom this century.”

He published a number of autobiographical writings too: Au Cadran de mon clocher (1960) and Jeux de Glaces (1961). He also rediscovered “the myths that drove (his) creativity”: the river, with La Loire, Agnès et les garçons, a novel he described as a transposition into adolescence of Jardin dans l’île, written much earlier, in 1936; the forest, with La Forêt perdue (1967);

finally, with La Mort de près (1972) he took up his wartime memories once again.

Around my 25th year, circumstances would have it that I should experience death, three times, at very close quarters. Put very precisely: to experience my own death, and survive. This memory has pursued me constantly, like weft entwining the warp of my days.

I should add that it has helped me, and continues to do so, that I know, I am certain, and that certainty determines my current attempt: storytelling is a means of transmission, like the guardian of a message which ought to be beneficial.

For a radio programme on France Culture, he wrote a series of animal stories that went on to be published as the collection Tendre Bestiaire (1968), soon followed by Le Bestiaire enchanté (1969) and Bestiaire sans oubli (1971).

But the work associated with his duties was too much of a burden on his freedom. In 1974, he did what no other Perpetual Secretary had done before him: he resigned.

On 9 October 197?, Joseph Kessel wrote to him: “I learnt rather belatedly of your decision. I know... I know... You have done the right thing. You have given us much and for a long time. And I am happy that you have your freedom once more. But from a selfish point of view, it is a blow. You were the bond, the element of friendship. You humanised the role so wonderfully.

Maurice Genevoix would recount the pleasures, obligations and occasional disappointments of his position in a short work entitled La Perpétuité (1974).

The centuries-old Académie is not short of perpetuals. It has the centuries on its side. It is wise and magnanimous. It will not hold it against me, writer that I am and mindful – as we all are, even those who claim not to be – of leaving behind me the hint of a wake in the shoreless ocean of time, that I changed perpetuity.”

He returned to Les Vernelles, where, “time after time”, no matter what path he trod, he would always return.

It was my house, my garden, my land, all I had ever needed in my life.”

There he wrote Un jour (1976), a novel he had been mulling over for some time, which is also a philosophical text: “That of a day like any other, like yesterday, like tomorrow, in which love and death, war, devotion and friendship, storms and calmer weather all come to pass, a weird and wonderful tale perhaps, that carries us over the infinite planet where we are, but where the beauty of things is only what it is if it is divine, beneath a sky whose immensity raises the invincible hope of men.”

With this book, which was a great success, he found his loyal readers once again. It was followed by Lorelei (1978), a novel of teenage confrontation, in which a German boy and a French boy, with their different temperaments, are torn between hate and friendship.

His last book, Trente Mille Jours (1980) – 30 000 days of memories since his childhood in Châteauneuf – established him, together with television, as a household name. The general public rediscovered the storyteller, the Loire wanderer, the passionate ecologist even before the term existed, the lover of language who spoke such pure French, a witness of his century and an ardent defender of his heritage. People fell for his charm, his culture without pedantry, his attention to others, his ability to capture the human in every man.

Life went on, the life of a man among men, with his share of sorrows and joys; and, year after year, always engaged. I am one of those who have never been tempted, save during my months at the front (...), to keep a private journal. What’s the use, if there is not a page of what they write and publish where they are not entirely – as I’ve just said – engaged? What begins as a barely audible call, a temptation besieged by anxiety, is gradually revealed to be an inner force which, by a fatal sequence of events, little by little makes a vocation into a way of life, or life into a vocation. That is just how I experienced it, how I have always written.”

He still had other projects, a collection of “Spanish short stories” and also a “possible book” that would once more address “childhood and initiation”. But he died suddenly on holiday in Javea, Spain, on 8 September 1980, shortly before his 90th birthday.

Fortunately, memory is selective. It knows the dead it is dealing with, it lives off them as much as it does off the living.. There is no such thing as death.. I can close my eyes; I shall have my heaven in the hearts of those who remember me.”

Simone Veil

1927-2017

A Holocaust survivor, author of the French abortion act and strongly pro-European, Simone Veil died on 30 June 2017, at the age of 89. That day, French political life lost one of its greatest, most illustrious figures. On 1 July 2018, Simone Veil was the fifth woman to enter the Pantheon... >> Read the full article at: www.gouvernement.fr


 

“Our heritage is there, in your hands, in your thoughts and your hearts, in your intelligence and your sensibility.”*

 


* Extract from Simone Veil’s 2010 speech >> Resource via www.ambassadeurs-memoire-shoah.org

 

 “There are now no more than a handful of Auschwitz survivors left. Soon, our remembrance will rely only on our families, on the State, and on the institutions that have made it their mission, in particular those responsible for sites like the one you are at today. It will also be a source of inspiration for artists and authors, like an object that escapes us, for better or for worse. Above all, our remembrance must be integrated and reconciled with the teaching of history in schools, making pupils and teachers essential intermediaries in the important process of transmission.


It will be up to you to see that our memory lives on, to pass on our words and the names of our dead comrades; and our terrible experience, too, of barbarity taken to its extreme, whereby the most primary  human instincts were pandered to as the workings of a cruel modernity.


Humanity is a fragile veneer, but that veneer exists. By talking about this other world of camps and torment into which the Jews were thrust, we are telling you of this abomination, but we are also bearing witness to the reasons for not giving up hope. Firstly, for some of us, there were those who helped us during the war, through at times simple, at times perilous actions that contributed to our survival. There was camaraderie among prisoners, which, although not systematic, had such a beneficial effect. Then, for that tiny minority who returned to France in 1945, life was intensified, resumed with its joys and its sorrows.


If only our laughter would resonate with you like our immense sadness.


Our heritage is there, in your hands, in your thoughts and your hearts, in your intelligence and your sensibility.


It is for you to ensure that vigilance is not an empty word, an appeal echoing in the void of numbed consciences. The Holocaust may have been a unique phenomenon in human history, but the poison of racism, antisemitism, the rejection of ‘strangers' and hate are not the preserve of any one period, culture or people. They are a daily threat, at different levels and in varying ways, everywhere and always, last century and in this new one. That world is yours. It is built on the ashes of Auschwitz.


Yet your responsibility is not to give in to misguided and confused ideas. Suffering is intolerable; but not all situations are the same. Be sure to show discernment, as time distances us ever further from these events, making their trivialisation a perhaps even greater menace than denial. Teaching about the Holocaust is not a vaccine against antisemitism or totalitarian abuses, but it can help to forge the consciences of each and every one of you. It should make you think about the mechanisms and consequences of this dramatic story. Our testimony exists as an appeal to you to embody and defend democratic values, rooted in absolute respect for human dignity, that are our most precious legacy to you, the youth of the 21st century.

 

> Simone Veil, archives d'une vie

> Documentary

Simone-Veil-memoires-d-une-immortelle

The story of an exceptional life based on Simone Veil’s private archives. Five years before she died, Simone Veil gave all the files, official documents, notes she had written, letters she had received – all the “papers” she had patiently kept throughout her lifetime – to the Archives Nationales. “Simone Veil, mémoire d’une immortelle” is a moving historical portrait of a woman whose uprightness, open-mindedness and acute sense of the meaning of the State and justice make her an example to many. Directed by Pierre Bonte-Joseph A Public Sénat production. 

The CWGC Experience

 >> Take a look behind the scenes at the work of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), which honours the memory of those soldiers killed throughout the world in the two world wars.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is over a century old. For the first time, visitors can take a look behind the scenes at the work that is needed to commemorate the 1.7 million Commonwealth casualties from the First and Second World Wars.

The CWGC Experience is a unique new visitor attraction that shines a light on the work of the remarkable organisation at the heart of remembrance of the war dead.

Our free audio guide will walk you through each aspect of the work we do: from the story of how we still recover and rebury the dead today, to the skilled artisan craftsmen at work maintaining the world’s most impressive and recognisable monuments and memorials, a trip to the battlefields of the Western Front is not complete without a visit to the CWGC Experience.

Sources : ©The CWGC Experience
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Practical information

Address

5-7 rue Angèle Richard - 62217
Beaurains
03 21 21 52 75

Prices

Admission - Free - Parking reservation charge for vehicles with over 12 seats: € 20 / Over 20-seaters: € 50

Weekly opening hours

9H – 16H

Fermetures annuelles

December and January

Site Web : www.cwgc.org

Mountain Troops Museum

Since 1888, mountain troops have taken part in French military operations.

The Musée des Troupes de Montagne was designed to tell the extraordinary story of this army corps specialising in mountain combat. It is one of 15 museums belonging to the French army. Founded in 1988, it was initially housed in the governor’s palace in Grenoble. Then in 2009, it was resited within the fortifications of the Grenoble Bastille. High above the city, the museum is accessible by road or cable car, nicknamed bulles, or ‘bubbles’.

 

On your visit, you will have the opportunity to see a whole array of objects relating to these alpine soldiers: uniforms, weapons, sports articles, radio equipment, insignia, books and photographs. A multilingual audio guide will tell you the fabulous history, from past to present, of this army corps which has taken part in many military operations. From the First World War trenches, to aiding the French Resistance, to involvement in the Algerian War and operations in Lebanon and Afghanistan: so many scenes representing the actions of the mountain troops. You are bound to be filled with admiration for the spirit, commitment and exceptional values of this army corps.

 

The museum is open throughout the year, except January.

 

Not far away stands a memorial to the members of the mountain corps killed in action since its founding. 

 

Sources : ©Musée des Troupes de montagne
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Practical information

Address

Site de la Bastille 38000
Grenoble
+33 (0)4 76 00 93 41

Prices

Full price: € 3 Concessions: € 1.50 (students, over-65s, unemployed, large families, teachers). Free: schoolchildren, under-18s, disabled people and members of the armed forces. For concessionary and free admission, proof of entitlement must be provided.

Weekly opening hours

Tuesday to Sunday, 11 am (in winter)/9.30 am (May to October) to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

January

39-45 MEMORIAL

Complex of blockhouses in the fort of Cité d’Alet, Saint-Malo, with the museum entrance. © TCY / fr.wikipedia

Built in 1994 by Saint-Malo city council for the 50th anniversary of liberation, the memorial is installed in the German anti-aircraft defences built from 1942 onwards, in the grounds of the 18th-century fort of Cité d’Alet.

In an area of just over 500 m2, split between three levels and ten rooms, visitors are plunged into those dark years of Saint-Malo’s history. Photos, mannequins, weaponry and reconstructed scenes recreate the atmosphere of the period, based on the following themes:

 

  • The invasion of 1940
  • How the port was used
  • Building the bunkers
  • Cité d’Alet (one of the most fortified sites on the Atlantic Wall)
  • The battle for liberation
  • The island of Cézembre (one of the most heavily bombed sites of the Second World War)

 

The bunker itself has been restored to its original state. Tours (guided only) begin at set times and last one hour. Tours are followed at certain times by the screening of an archive film (45 mins), which charts the different stages of the battle for liberation, then shows the reconstruction of the old city, 80% destroyed in the fighting.

 

From June to September, themed tours are offered:

- “History” tour: Almost entirely in the bunker. Evokes the period 1940-44 in Saint-Malo. With film screening.

- “Discovery of the fortifications” tour: 75% outside, 25% in the bunker. Evokes the construction of the 18th-century and Second World War fortifications found on the site. Evokes the everyday lives of soldiers in those fortifications. No film screening.

The two tours are complementary.

 

Dias-MEMORIAL-39-45

Heavy machine-gun position in its original bunker.
Only reconstruction of its kind in France - A loophole in the corridors of the bunker.
- The radio and telephone transmission room.
- US transmission post.
Credit: © Mémorial 39-45

 

Sources : ©MÉMORIAL 39-45
 

2019 PRICES

 

 

39-45 Memorial

Pass for

themed tours

39-45 Memorial

(June to September)

Adults

Groups of over 10 adults (per person)

Schoolchildren, students*

Families (2 adults + 2 or more children)*

Members of the armed forces, school parties (Saint-Malo only), jobseekers, people in receipt of Income Support

€ 6

€ 4

€ 3

€ 15

Free

 

€ 9

 

€ 4

€ 20

Free

 

 

Weekly opening hours

 

 

Tour start times

 

April, May, October

Closed on Mondays

 

 

June, September

Closed on Mondays

 

 

July, August

Daily

 

 

39-45 Memorial

Guided tours only (1 hour). Please arrive 20 minutes early.

 

Maximum 25 people at a time.

Groups by arrangement in the morning.

 

* Tours with film screening (45 mins extra):

“The Battle of Saint-Malo”

 

 

2.30 pm*

3.15 pm

4.30 pm*

 

 

 

 

Annual closing on 3/11

 

History” tour

2.30 pm*
3.15 pm

4.30 pm*

 

Discovery of the fortifications” tour

10.30 am, Thursday to Sunday

 

 

History” tour

10.15 am*
2 pm*
3 pm*

4 pm*

 

Discovery of the fortifications” tour

11 am
5 pm

Closed on 1 May and 1 November.

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Practical information

Address

Allée Gaston Buy 35400
Saint-Malo
+33 (0)2 99 82 41 74

Prices

See table bottom left.

Mémoire du Maquis, history resource

The Les Glières Plateau is a Second World War remembrance site. From 31 January to 26 March 1944, nearly 500 men gathered here, under the command of Lieutenant

Tom Morel, then Captain Maurice Anjot, to take delivery of weapons. After two months, those who had chosen “to live in freedom or to die” faced a massive, combined attack from the forces of Vichy and the Wehrmacht. Over 140 maquisards lost their lives

Things to see on the Les Glières Plateau, a site which is emblematic of Resistance values:


The Mémoire du Maquis history resource is open to the public approximately ten months of the year, and activities, events and visits are regularly organised there. Run by the Haute-Savoie Departmental Authority, this multimedia space is equipped with interactive terminals that enable you to freely consult the CD-ROM ‘The Resistance en Haute-Savoie’ and the website ‘Mémoire des Alpes’. It also has a projection room, where you can watch a historical portrayal of Les Glières, ‘To live in freedom or to die’ (52 mins) or the documentary ‘August 1944: the liberation of Annecy and Haute-Savoie’ (25 mins). There is also a gift shop.


The historical discovery trail: In the middle of the plateau, around the parachute drop zone, this waymarked trail charts the organisation and everyday life of the Les Glières battalion during the winter of 1944. Lasting two hours, it is accessible to walkers of all abilities. A worksheet is available for children to complete by reading the information boards along the path.


The National Monument to the Resistance: This work of modern art by Émile Gilioli symbolises resistance and hope. It was built in 1973 on the initiative of the Association des Glières. Inside the monument are other works by the artist. When you approach the Les Glières Plateau, the National Monument to the Resistance appears to sit on the grass of this vast meadow, its geometry mimicking the shapes of the mountains, in particular the Montagne de Jalouvre, which serves as its backdrop. It is a sculpture without substance, a bas-relief that appears disproportionately larger against a background of nature, its white mass standing out from the rest of the landscape.

 

 

Sources: © Mémoire du Maquis, accueil historique

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Practical information

Address

Plateau des Glières 74570
Thorens-Glière
04 50 33 21 31

Prices

- Full price: € 3 - Young people: € 2 (ages 9-25) - Groups: € 2 (over 11 people) - Free for children under 8 and veterans - Passes/combination tickets: two-site pass, family pass

Weekly opening hours

Daily except Saturdays, 9.30 am to 12.30 pm and 1.30 pm to 5 pm July and August: Open daily, 10 am to 12.30 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

October to February Local tourist office: Office de Tourisme de Pays de Fillière - 22, place de la Mairie - 74570 Thorens-Glières - Tel.: +33 (0)4 50 22 40 31

Memorial for Peace Museum - Le Militarial - Boissezon

Le Militarial, in Boissezon (Tarn), presents the Memorial for Peace Museum, a remembrance site in honour of war veterans of the 20th century.

 

With eight rooms, 5 000 objects on display and a library of over 10 000 books, it is an essential learning resource - and definitely worth a visit.

Click on the picture to zoom in

 

Housed in the 11th-century Boissezon fort, this outstanding collection of authentic objects and documents concerned with the history of armed conflict in the 20th century is an educational and remembrance resource. Its eight exhibition rooms display weaponry, equipment, photographs, documents and literature from the First and Second World Wars, as well as more recent conflicts like Korea, Indochina and Algeria. Armed, uniformed mannequins of our brave soldiers add a remarkable layer of realism. These conflicts left scars which should help prevent new wars and serve as a reminder for future generations.

 

Created by the now deceased Dr Christian Bourdel, the museum is regularly enhanced through donations and new acquisitions. The museum’s considerable reserve collection means it is able to put on regular temporary exhibitions, as well as lending items to other organisations for events.

 

 

Click on the picture of your choice to zoom in

    

 

Families, friends, school parties and work groups are all welcome to visit this unique museum in the Occitanie region.

 

 

Sources : ©Musée Mémorial pour la Paix – Le Militarial - Boissezon

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Practical information

Address

La Bastide du Fort - 81490
Boissezon
05 63 50 86 30

Prices

Standard price: € 5 Concessions: € 3 (children, large families, groups, students and jobseekers) Free: children under 12. (Card payments not accepted.)

Weekly opening hours

15 June to 15 September Daily except Tuesday, 10 am to 12 noon and 2 pm to 6 pm Closed on Tuesdays 16 February to 31 May and 16 September to 14 December Sundays and bank holidays: 2 pm to 6 pm Other days by arrangement

Fermetures annuelles

15 December to 15 February