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Shoah memorial in Drancy

©Shoah Memorial in Drancy

The purpose of this centre is to present the history of the Drancy camp, 70 years after Jews began to be deported from France to Nazi extermination camps.
A new site for history and education opposite Cité de la Muette.

Cité de la Muette was a collective housing unit built in the 1930s but was never completed. In 1941 it became an internment camp and then, in 1942 a camp to group together Jews of France before deporting them to the extermination camps. Between March 1942 and August 1944, around 63,000 of the 76,000 Jews deported from France passed through Drancy. Cité de la Muette was inhabited again as of 1948 and has gradually become a memorial for Drancy: commemorative plaques, erection of a memorial monument, buildings listed as historical monuments since 2001. 

 

A place of history and education open to everybody, the Drancy Shoah Memorial covers an area of 2,500 m² on five levels. It has a permanent exhibition on the camp's history, several educational rooms, a documentation centre and a conference room. With its large windows facing Cité de la Muette, the dialogue between the two is constant. Just after entering, visitors can see on the wall the faces of 12,000 Jews who were interned at Drancy between 1941 and 1944.

The permanent exhibition uses video testimonials, archive documents and photographs from the period to tell the history of the Drancy camp and the daily life of those interned here from 1941 to 1944, the organisation of the deportations from 1942, and the construction of the camp's memory after the war. Ten documentaries by Patrick Rotman are broadcast. In the middle of the exhibition, the House of Children, designed by Delphine Gleize, allows visitors to learn the fate of children who were interned and deported.

A number of educational activities are possible. For school children there are educational workshops, memory trails, general and themed visits and dedicated areas. In the documentation centre, scanned publications, photographs, films and archives on the history of Drancy can be viewed. School children and the general public can carry out research on the camp and on the people to whom this site is dedicated. A number of testimonials will be collected from the population of Drancy in connection with local associations to improve the collections.

The Drancy Shoah Memorial is complementary to the Paris Shoah Memorial. It is a place of mediation between the site of the former camp and the public, a place of history and transmission. It will allow school children and the general public to be better informed of the history of Cité de la Muette and particularly the central role of the Drancy camp in excluding French Jews in the Second World War and in the implementation of the "Final solution" by the Nazis in France, with collaboration from the Vichy government.

 

Drancy Shoah Memorial - 110-112, avenue Jean-Jaurès - 93700 Drancy
Tel.: +33 (0)1 77 48 78 20 – Email: contact@memorialdelashoah.org

 

www.memorialdelashoah.org

Article by the Memorial on the inauguration
 

 

Reception for groups and school parties:
Tel.: +33 (0)1 53 01 18 01 – Email: education@memorialdelashoah.org



Getting there:

Public transport - RER B to "Le Bourget"
then bus 143 to "Square de la Libération".
Bus 143 and 703, stop at "Square de la Libération"
Bus 151, 251, 684 and 551, stop at "Place du 19 mars 1962"

By car - Market car park.

Autolib terminal: 105, avenue Jean-Jaurès

 

Paris-Drancy shuttle:
Every Sunday until 31 March 2013 (inclusive).
2pm: leave from Mémorial de la Shoah (17 rue Geoffroy-l’Asnier, 75004 Paris)
arrive at Mémorial de Drancy at 2.45/3pm
5pm: bus returns to Mémorial de Paris
 

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Practical information

Address

110-112, avenue Jean-Jaurès 93700
Drancy
01 77 48 78 20

Prices

Gratuit, dans la limite des places disponibles

Weekly opening hours

Du dimanche au jeudi de 10 h à 18 h Entrée libre Audioguides disponibles en français et anglais.

Mayenne Deportees Memorial

©Mémorial des Déportés de la Mayenne

The programme of upcoming events at the Mayenne Deportees Memorial (starting in October 2020).
Entitled Destins Brisés (Broken Destinies), this original programme will look at the Holocaust, the Jews arrested and deported from Mayenne during the Second World War, and antisemitism. A series of public talks and special events on these themes are planned for later in the year and 2021. Poster - Presentation booklet - Programme
>> Upcoming events

Currently showing: temporary exhibition “Imaginer pour résister” (Imagining to resist)
 

imaginer-Resister-Mayenne-2019-Memorial-deportation

 

Remembrance is essential to building the present and the future. Learn about deportation through the first-hand accounts of the deportees of Mayenne.

 


View the Memorial’s educational offering >>>  Mayenne

Opened in 2012, the Mayenne Deportees Memorial is a visitors’ site that pays tribute to the people of Mayenne who were deported to the Nazi concentration and extermination camps during the Second World War.

This remembrance site is also a learning centre and a place of artistic expression and sharing.

The Memorial consists of two complementary spaces:

the Remembrance Area and the Vigilance Area. Objects collected from the camps, exhibitions, timelines, a wall of names, and written and oral accounts of deportees are presented in a unique and accessible setting.

Through the Memorial, the organisation that manages the site hopes to raise the awareness of present and future generations about the values of tolerance and respect, human rights and fighting all forms of discrimination.

The Memorial’s permanent exhibition, “Souffrances et Espoirs” (Suffering and Hope), takes its title from the eponymous book by Mayenne deportee Marcel Le Roy.  The exhibition is split into three parts: “Before arrest”, “In the camp” and “Freedom and hope”.

First-hand accounts, extracts from deportees’ memoirs and photographs will take you down the long road to the hell of the camps. A tribute is also paid to the Righteous Among the Nations, who put their lives in danger to hide Jews.  The last part of the exhibition looks at Europe and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This part is the link with the Vigilance Area, which seeks to raise people’s awareness about current events.

Maps and timelines explain the context of the period and provide an introduction to the visit.

The Association pour le Mémorial de la Déportation organises a variety of activities (conferences, temporary exhibitions, readings, etc.) throughout the year.

Source : ©Mémorial des Déportés de la Mayenne
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Practical information

Address

23 rue Ambroise de Loré - 53100
MAYENNE
02 43 08 87 35

Prices

Full price: € 5 per adult (unguided visit) or € 6 (guided tour) Young people and jobseekers: € 3 (unguided visit) or € 4 (guided tour) Adult groups: € 4 per adult (unguided visit) or € 5 (guided tour) Free for children under 12 May’N Pass: adults € 4.50, children € 2.50 Combo ticket with the chateau: €7

Weekly opening hours

Tuesday to Saturday and the first Sunday of the month, 2 pm to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

Bank holidays, Christmas holidays and in January (except for groups). Local tourist office: Halte Fluviale, Quai de Waiblingen - 53100 Mayenne - Tel.: +33 (0)2 43 04 19 37

The former Bobigny deportation train station

Copy of the table of convoys © Henri Perrot (left) - Passenger building seen from the bridge © Steve Eichler (right).

Since 2006, the city has been working with associations of former deportees and the SNCF (French National Railroad Company) on the project to save this former deportation train station.

 

From the summer of 1943 to the summer of 1944, the Bobigny train station, a vast area including a freight station and a passenger station in the outer ring of Parisian suburbs, became the centre for deporting the Jews held at the Drancy concentration camp, located a little over 2 km away. For this it replaced the Le Bourget station which, starting in March 1942, had been used as the main deportation centre for French Jews.

In 13 months, 22,407 men, women and children of all ages were loaded onto convoys of sealed rail cars that took them to the Auschwitz death camp where the vast majority of them were killed.

 

After World War II, this 3.5-hectare site was used for industrial purposes by a scrap metal dealer who moved in 2005. This place of remembrance, listed on the supplementary Historical Monuments inventory, is the only example in France of a deportation train station that was abandoned and preserved in a condition close to its original layout. It is therefore a unique site.

 

 

 

 

The site of the former Bobigny deportation train station can be visited free of charge by appointment.
One Saturday or one Sunday a month – E-mail address: Mission.gare@ville-bobigny.fr

 

 

Registration on the Seine-Saint Denis Tourist Office website:

 

 

Bobigny Tourist Office – Tel.: +33 (0)1 48 30 83 29 - E-mail address: otsi@ville-bobigny.fr

 

 

School and group visits (by appointment):

Tél : 01 41 60 99 91 - Adresse mail : anne.bourgon@ville-bobigny.fr

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Practical information

Address

69-151 Avenue Henri Barbusse 93 000
Bobigny
01 41 60 78 10

CHRD de Lyon - Resistance and Deportation History Centre

Salle du musée. Source : Le C.H.R.D.

 

 

Over the past twenty years, this indispensable place of remembrance has welcomed over one million visitors, making it one of the most important museums of World War II history in France. It is symbolically located in the former Military Health College, which was occupied by the Gestapo between 1943 and 1944.

 

 

To celebrate this anniversary, the Museum has set up a new permanent exhibition after a full year of work. The emphasis has been placed on concrete content based on new tangible and intangible elements: items from the collection and eyewitness accounts. The museum itinerary was designed along the walls of the historical building, the former Gestapo headquarters in Lyon.
 
 
 
While the historical approach to this period has acquired new momentum thanks to university research, and the Lyon metropolitan area has acquired new facilities – the home of Doctor Dugoujon, where Jean Moulin was arrested on 21 June 1943, and Montluc Prison – bringing together the notion of repression of the Resistance and persecution of the Jewish population, the theme needed to be reoriented toward a more pragmatic approach to the history of the Resistance, its repression and the social and political context in Lyon between 1940 and 1945.
 
Showcasing the museum’s collections, presenting the latest developments in historical research, revealing the specific features of the city of Lyon during the war and reflecting on the history of the building are some of the objectives that the new exhibition seeks to achieve.

 

An updated scenographic presentation

 

Some thirty audiovisual points related to the chronology or to an object present the voices of eyewitnesses to provide a sensitive counterpoint to the historical discovery of the events, encouraging an encounter that the progressive disappearance of the eyewitnesses has made precious and irreplaceable.
 

 

The collections

For the very first time, the Museum’s collections will be showcased in a 300 m² itinerary, mainly focusing on the unique features of the Resistance in the urban context of the city of Lyon. This comprises the heart of the new project.

 

Photographic Archives

The new exhibition also highlights the work of three renowned photographers of the period: André Gamet, Charles Bobenrieth and Émile Rougé.

 

Educational department

 

The Museum proposes a new, expanded offer to students and teachers to help them to discover and understand the new exhibition.
 
As we advance into “History”, the CHRD now has a tool for reflection and discussions with this new permanent exhibition to help our contemporaries to understand the complex world around us.

 

Centre d'Histoire de la Résistance et de la Déportation

14 avenue Berthelot - 69007 Lyon

Tél : 04 78 72 23 11

 

www.chrd.lyon.fr


C.H.R.D press kit :


 

 

 

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Practical information

Address

14 avenue Berthelot - 69007
Lyon

Prices

Exposition permanente : Tarif normal : 4€ - Tarif réduit : 2€ Exposition temporaire : Tarif normal : 5€ - Tarif réduit : 3€ Visite couplée : Tarif normal : 6€ - Tarif réduit : 4€ Visite commentée et visite singulière : 3€ + billet d’entrée Procès Barbie Accès libre

Weekly opening hours

Du mercredi au dimanche, de 10h à 18h. Le centre de documentation : En libre accès. Du mercredi au samedi, de 10h à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 17h.

Fermetures annuelles

Les jours fériés (sauf le 8 mai). Entre Noël et le Jour de l'an.

Email : 04 78 72 23 11

Mémorial de Caen

Memorial of Caen ©Licence Creative Commons. Public domain.

 

The Mémorial de Caen is a museum and war memorial dedicated to the causes and consequences of World War II taking the year 1918 as its starting point.
 

 

Inaugurated on 6th June 1988 by François Mitterrand, the Mémorial de Caen is a landmark museum on the history of the 20th century.
 
Awarded Musée de France status, it sets out to demonstrate the importance of understanding the history of the world to understand the world today. Based on its innovative and emotion-charged displays, this City of History for Peace offers a journey through history and a pause for thought on our future via three key exhibition areas: international tensions during the Second World War, the Cold War and also the subject of Peace.
 
 
In addition to its historic interests, the Mémorial de Caen seeks to demonstrate the fragility and demands of Peace and Human Rights.
A major cultural and tourist site in Normandy, the Mémorial de Caen is set in almost 90 acres of gardens and is today one of the most popular memorial sites in Europe attracting 400,000 visitors every year. The winner of many prizes for its facilities and fascinating museum displays, the site also offers guided tours.

 

 

 

Four permanent displays and a temporary exhibition at the Mémorial de Caen give visitors a broad understanding of 20th century history.

Permanent spaces:

  • Berlin at the heart of the Cold War
  • Taches d'Opinions – Global current affairs through press cartoons
  • World War, Total War
  • The Normandy Landings and the Battle of Normandy

 

The Mémorial de Caen offers visitors a comprehensive multi-language audioguide service in addition to its guided tours.

 


The Mémorial de Caen

Esplanade Eisenhower B.P. 55026 - 14050 Caen Cedex 4

Tél : +33 (0)2 31 06 06 45

Fax : +33 (0)2 31 06 01 66

Email : contact@memorial-caen.fr

 

 

Opening times

 Prices

 

 

Site of the Caen Musée de la Paix memorial

 

 

Memory of Normandy

 

 

Site of the Calvados tourist board

 

 

 

Website of Normandy's regional tourist committee

 

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Practical information

Address

Esplanade Eisenhower - CS 55026 14066
caen Cedex 4
02 31 06 06 44

Prices

Voir lien en bas de l'article

Weekly opening hours

Voir lien en bas de l'article

Fermetures annuelles

Du 5 au 27 janvier 2014 inclus Fermé le 25 décembre et le 1er janvier

The Shoah Memorial

The Shoah Memorial. Source: Shoah Memorial

 

Located in the Marais quarter in Paris, today it has become the reference institution in Europe for the Shoah.


 

The Shoah Memorial was opened to the public on 27 January 2005 for the sixtieth anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz camp and the European Day in Memory of the Holocaust and for the Prevention of Crimes against Humanity.


 

Located in the historic Marais quarter of Paris, today it has become the reference institution in Europe for the Shoah.

Understanding the past to shed light on the future – that is this site’s mission as a place of remembrance, a museum and a documentation centre.


 

Open to a wide, diverse public, it provides numerous spaces and activities: a permanent exhibition on the Shoah and the history of the Jews in France during World War II, a temporary exhibition space, an auditorium that schedules projections, conferences, debates, book presentations, etc., the Wall of Names engraved with the manes of the 76,000 Jewish men, women and children deported from France between 1942 and 1944; the Wall of the Righteous which bears the names of the 2,693 Righteous Among the Nations who protected or saved Jews in France during the Nazi occupation; the crypt, a place of contemplation where the ashes of victims of Auschwitz and the Warsaw ghetto are held; the Centre of Contemporary Jewish Documentation (one million documents archived, 90,000 photographs and 50,000 books) and its reading room, a multimedia space, pedagogical areas where workshops are held for children and activities for teacher classes, and a bookstore.


 


 

Intended for the widest public, the Shoah Memorial contributes to teaching about a crime that is unique in the history of humanity, but also takes part education and discussions on tolerance, freedom and democracy.


 


Shoah Memorial

17 rue Geoffroy l'Asnier 75004 Paris

Tel.: +33 (0)1 42 77 44 72 (switchboard and voice mail server)

Fax: +33 (0)1 53 01 17 44

E-Mail: contact@memorialdelashoah.org


 


 

Opening hours

The museum is open every day except Saturdays from 10 am to 6 pm and Thursdays to 10 pm.


 

Closed on Saturdays, certain national bank holidays and certain Jewish holidays.

The reading rooms and the multimedia education centre are open every day except Saturdays from 10 am to 5.30 pm and Thursdays to 7.30 pm.

Mémorial de la Shoah

 

 

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Practical information

Address

17 rue Geoffroy l'Asnier 75004
Paris
01 42 77 44 72

Prices

Temporary exhibition: Free admission Auditorium: Full price: €5 / Reduced price: €3 Children’s workshops: €6

Weekly opening hours

Open daily, except Saturdays, from 10 am to 6 pm and Thursdays to 10 pm

Fermetures annuelles

Closed on Saturdays, certain national bank holidays and certain Jewish holidays

The Internment and Deportation Memorial at Royallieu

Carte postale de Royallieu. Source : http://www.11mai44.info/

The memorial, a historic place, is a reminder of the events that took place at the site of the former Royallieu internment camp.

Last February a memorial was opened on the site of the former Royallieu internment camp. As place of history, it is a reminder of events, setting them within the context of the Second World War and the Nazi policies of repression and extermination. As a place of remembrance, it pays homage to all those who were detained there before being deported to Germany and Poland or shot as hostages. In 1939, the Royallieu barracks near Compiègne in the Oise département was used as a military hospital before being converted by the Germans in June 1940 into a camp where they brought French and British prisoners of war.

In 1941, they turned it into a " permanent concentration camp for active enemy individuals" under the official name of Frontstalag 122, which became a "German police detention camp" by virtue of decree on the 30th December 1941. Resistance fighters, political and unionist militants, Jews, civilians arrested in raids and foreigners etc. - more than 45,000 of them would pass through there before being deported to Nazi concentration and extermination camps. "I got out of the last departure and really hope not to be in on the next one. I am here with some really nice, good people: communists, Gaullists, royalists, priests, aristocrats and country folk - it's an extraordinary mixture", the poet Robert Desnos, who was interned on the 20th March 1944, wrote to his girlfriend. A short respite. A death train took him away on the 27th April to Flöha en Saxe and he was to succumb to typhoid on the 8th June 1945 at Terezin. It was from the camp at Royallieu that the very first deportation train was to leave French soil on the 27th March 1942. It took over a thousand Jews to Auschwitz, as did the next one on the 5th June. A third convoy, consisting mostly of communist and unionist hostages, left Compiègne on the 6th July. Royallieu was thus to become a transit camp for detainees, for the most part political and resistance fighters, prior to their deportation.
A place for remembering Research carried out by the Remembrance of the Deportation Foundation at the History Department of the Ministry of Defence's archive office for victims of contemporary conflicts has allowed the identification of the departure of twenty-six large convoys, in addition to a dozen small convoys between 1942 and 1944. Including the first two convoys of deported Jews, this makes a total of forty convoys. Since the camp also served as a place for detaining hostages, other internees were shot in the surrounding forests once reprisal measures had been agreed. It is to all these people that the internment and deportation memorial is dedicated. This has just been built on part of the former camp by the town of Compiègne in partnership with the Remembrance of the Deportation Foundation, the Defence Department (Directorate of Memory, Heritage and Archives, SGA/DMPA), the Regional Council of Picardy, the General Council of the Oise, the Heritage Foundation and the Caisse des dépôts et consignations (a government body in charge of investing and lending public money). The historian and filmmaker Christian Delage created the journey through history. The architect and scenographer Jean-Jacques Raynaud designed the setting. The result is solemn, due as much to the materials used - glass, concrete and stone - as to the way the floors and walls in the three preserved buildings that remain out of the original twenty-five have been stripped back to their initial condition, and the use of sounds and images to set the scene. Opposite the entrance stands a wall to guide visitors towards the reception hall. Made up of a series of glass pillars bearing the names of all the deportees and internees of the camp at Royallieu identified to date, its purpose is to give the internees back their identities. It is through these names that visitors are introduced to the site. Around the buildings is what is today a garden of remembrance, as well as an exhibition area: plans of the internment camp, group photographs of the guards and written and recorded accounts accompany visitors as they retrace the history of the site.
The memorial provides two routes that are complementary to and inseparable from each other. One of them, the result of the hard work of historians, puts the history of the camp in context; the other encourages visitors to follow their own personal remembrance trail. The history is mapped out along a frieze running the length of the walls of the ten halls that form the tour. It covers in succession: the historic context, internment and the daily life of the camp, transportation on the deportation trains and forced labour and death in the Nazi camps. Documents and archive films illustrate the descriptions. Letters, photographs, drawings and recorded eyewitness accounts tell of life at Royallieu. In places, the images projected onto the walls and floors dominate the whole room. The remembrance trails themselves are an opportunity to meet the many witnesses, who tell of how they survived their passage through this transit camp. These accounts, in several different voices, demonstrate the wide diversity in the backgrounds of the detainees, their opinions and the conditions in which they were held. These men and women are constantly present: their names, their faces, their words and their written accounts remain with the visitor. The buildings are both exhibition halls and "exhibits" at the same time. The walls, floors and ceilings are all in their original condition: the tiles and lino have been removed, to reveal the original rough concrete that internees would have trodden; the false ceilings from the 1970's have been taken down to show the barracks' plastered ceilings; recent paint work has been scraped off to reveal the different layers of materials, colours and decoration beneath.
The words of witnesses The memorial provides many and varied sound recordings. Chosen carefully, some of them contribute in setting the scene. Broadcast all around the place, they are triggered automatically as they detect visitors' movement. Others are transmitted by an audio-guide, available to every visitor. In this way everyone can follow his own audio route, in his own language and at his own speed. The audio-guide can also be used to develop tours for specific groups - young children or the partially sighted - and themed tours etc. The words of the witnesses resonate around the place. They resound off the metal and wooden chairs in the garden and leap out at you as you pass through the corridors of the buildings. It is these different accounts, organised by theme, such as arrival at the camp, daily and social life, ways of surviving, solidarity, loneliness, leaving for Germany etc., that best tell the history of the camp. These sound montages have been created from documents in the huge audio-visual collection built up by the Remembrance of the Deportation Foundation and from new accounts recorded especially for the memorial. At times, the scenography calls on the emotions in a personal way, encouraging visitors to attune their feelings with those of the place itself and to remember rather then to discover. This is why, for example, on the floor in the barracks the positions where the beds would have been are marked using a single line to draw their outlines, extending up the walls to indicate bunk beds. The resulting impression of being cramped together is immediately apparent. In the same spirit, pictures of men and women are projected onto the walls very slowly, one after the other. Letters sent by prisoners to their families have been collected in two virtual albums that are projected onto two table screens, whilst at the same time being read aloud by actors. The tour ends in a room dedicated to the history of deportation, genocide and the punishment of criminals.
The contribution of the Defence Department Through the general administration department's Directorate of Memory, Heritage and Archives, the deputy minister for ex-servicemen awarded a grant of two million Euros spread over 2005 and 2006, as a contribution to the creation of this place of remembrance. In addition, the Defence Department, now the owner of the site of the former barracks at Royallieu, transferred the management of two hectares of land to the town of Compiègne and it is on this land that the Internment and Deportation Memorial was built.
Internment and Deportation Memorial Camp de Royallieu 2 bis, rue des Martyrs de la liberté 60200 Compiègne Tel. 03 44 96 37 00 E-mail: memorial@compiegne.fr

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Practical information

Address

2 bis rue des Martyrs de la liberté Camp de Royallieu 60200
Compiègne

Prices

Plein tarif: 3 € Demi tarif: 1,5 € Gratuit : Anciens combattants et victimes de guerre, anciens internés, déportés, enfants (- de 6 ans), les groupes scolaires de l'Agglomération de la Région de Compiègne et les Centres aérés de la ville de Compiègne

Weekly opening hours

Tous les jours de 10h à 18h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le mardi

Memorial to the Resistance and Deportation in Loire

Museum-Memorial room. Source: Saint-Etienne Tourist Information Office

 

The memorial upholds the memory of the resistance fighters and deportees from Saint-Etienne during the Second World War.

 

Inaugurated in 1999, the Memorial is dedicated to the Second World War and, in particular, the resistance movement and the deportation to the Nazi concentration and extermination camps.


 

There is an emphasis on the local nature of events. Two permanent exhibitions present the resistance movement in the region and the Nazi concentration camp system. Themed exhibitions feature the bombings, passive defence, daily life and other special themes.

Taking a historical journey through diverse photographic documents, testimonials, summary texts, newspapers, the clothing of deportees, arms and a model of Buchenwald concentration camps, visitors will understand the horrors of the Nazi camps and the reality of the Resistance in Loire: the Wodli, Le Boussoulet , 93 and Espoir maquis, the Ange group, etc.; as well as the bombing of the town on 26 May 1944.


 

Educational events:

  • Saint-Etienne under occupation: rationing, the fate of the Jews, passive defence, bombing;

  • The Nazi concentration camps;

  • Resistance in the Department. The Memorial is a meeting point for the generation who survived the events of the Second World War and today's generations.

 

A documentation centre allows visitors to consult magazines, books and CD-Roms on the Second World War, the Resistance and deportation.


 


Memorial to the Resistance and Deportation

9 Rue du Théâtre 42000 Saint-Etienne

Tel: 04.77.34.03.69

E-mail: memorial.loire@wanadoo.fr


 

Opening times

Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. and 2-6 p.m.

Open on Saturdays for groups only (reservation required)

Annual holidays: Christmas holidays and 14 July to 15 August


 

Admission

Become a member of the association from €10 a year

Admission to the Memorial: €2, free for school visitors

Free educational activities


 

Getting there:

  • By train: Lyon to Saint-Etienne line, Châteaucreux station.

  • Public transport: Line 4 (Hôpital Nord - Solaure), Line 5 (Châteaucreux - Bellevue - Terrasse) – stops: Peuple Foy or Peuple Libération.


 

Memorial to the Resistance and Deportation of the Loire


 

 

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Practical information

Address

9 Rue du Théâtre 42000
Saint-Etienne
04.77.34.03.69

Prices

2 € Gratuite pour les publics scolaires. Activités pédagogiques gratuites.

Weekly opening hours

Lundi au vendredi: de 9h à 12h et de 14h à 18h. Ouvert le samedi pour les groupes sur réservation

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé pour les vacances de Noël, le 14 juillet et le 15 août

RIVESALTES CAMP MEMORIAL

© Maxppp - Belloumi

A witness to the dark years of the 20th century (the Spanish Civil War, Second World War and Algerian War), the Rivesaltes camp occupies a unique and prominent place in the history of France.

Dates for your diary > See the Memorial's full programme of arts, science and cultural events
Visit the website

View the educational offering >>>  Rivesaltes


Originally conceived as a military camp, Rivesaltes was, successively, southern France’s principal internment camp for Spanish Republicans, foreign Jews and gypsies, in 1941-42; a “guarded residence centre” for collaborators and depot for Axis POWs between 1944 and 1948; and a holding camp for harkis and their families between 1962 and 1964.

To tell its story, a memorial was built on the site of Block F of the camp, amid the ruins of the huts that were home to more than 60 000 people. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the building, with an area of 4 000 m2, is both a reference centre for the history of the forced displacement and detention of people, and a key remembrance site.

 

Sources : ©MEMORIAL DU CAMP DE RIVESALTES
© Maxppp - Belloumi

 

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Practical information

Address

avenue christian bourquin 66600
Rivesaltes
0468083970

Prices

- Plein tarif 8€- Jeunes gratuit jusqu’à 18 ans - Groupes de 10 à 25 personnes 150€ (visite guidée) De 25 à 50 personnes 250 € (visite guidée)- Gratuité : scolairesPass/tarifs groupés éventuels A partir de 10 personnes 5€ (visite libre)

Weekly opening hours

10h à 18h Du mardi au dimanche du 01/11 au 31/03Tous les jours du 01/04 au 31/10

Fermetures annuelles

1° janvier, 1° mai, 1 novembre, 25 décembreOffice de tourisme de référence - 8 avenue Ledru Rollin - 66600 RIVESALTES - Tel +33 4 68 64 04 04

Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Picardie

Résultat de la volonté de résistants de transmettre aux jeunes générations l’histoire de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Picardie et les idéaux pour lesquels les résistants s’étaient battus, un musée a été inauguré en 1986 dans l’Aisne à Tergnier.

L’initiative de la création revient à M.Etienne DROMAS, capitaine FFI du groupement B et président des Combattants Volontaires de la Résistance.


Consulter l'offre pédagogique du musée >>>  Picardie


La Picardie est une région fortement touchée par les deux guerres mondiales. 

Région stratégique, lieu de passage entre le nord de l'Europe et Paris, la Picardie se trouve partagée entre la zone interdite et la zone occupée. La présence de l'occupant est durement ressentie. Des hommes et des femmes vont peu à peu réagir. "L'armée de l'ombre" se construit. 

Le département de l'Aisne a sur son territoire un musée consacré à l'histoire des résistants et des déportés. Un musée voulu par des résistants dont Etienne Dromas, qui a trouvé sa place dans la commune associée de Tergnier, Fargniers. 

Vous êtes invités à découvrir ce musée unique en Picardie, implanté sur une place classée monument historique.

L’histoire du lieu

Après avoir trouvé à Tergnier un bâtiment pouvant l’accueillir, le conseil général de l’Aisne vote la somme nécessaire à sa rénovation. L’office départemental de tourisme, avec à sa tête Maurice Bruaux, apporte son aide et son concours. Le premier aménagement se fait grâce à la mobilisation des résistants qui assurent son fonctionnement pendant de nombreuses années.

 

À voir

Le premier espace permet de découvrir et de comprendre l’histoire de la période allant de l’arrivée d’Hitler au pouvoir jusqu’à l’intervention du maréchal Pétain le 17 juin 1940, suivent des espaces consacrés à l’appel du 18 juin, la naissance de la Résistance et son action, la vie quotidienne sous l’Occupation, la répression et la Déportation. Un espace est également consacré au bureau des opérations aériennes et aux parachutages, aux forces françaises libres dans le monde, au Débarquement et à la Libération. De nombreux objets et matériels viennent compléter l’exposition permanente : un Beechcraft C.45, une locomotive, un wagon ayant servi à la déportation… En octobre 2005, 300 mètres carrés se sont ajoutés à la salle d’exposition permanente. Cet espace polyvalent met à disposition du public une salle de réunion, de conférence, d’exposition temporaire et de projection ainsi qu’une médiathèque et un centre documentaire.

Le musée accorde une place toute particulière au public scolaire. Des dossiers pédagogiques ont été élaborés. Des ateliers (analyse de documents, rencontre avec des témoins…) sont développés sur différents thèmes (la vie sous l’Occupation, la Résistance…), et sont animés par les enseignants ou par un intervenant du musée.

 

Sources : ©Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Picardie
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Practical information

Address

5 place carnegie FARGNIERS 02700
Tergnier
Téléphone/ 03.23.57.93.77

Prices

Individuels :- adultes : 5€- 18-25 ans : 1€- moins de 18 ans : gratuité.Entrée + visite guidée : 6 € (sur réservation)Groupes (à partir de 10 personnes):- adultes : 5€- scolaires : 2€.

Weekly opening hours

Mardi au samedi de 10h à 12h et de 14h à 18hDimanche après-midi de 14h30 à 18h30

Fermetures annuelles

1 mai1er novembre24 et 25 décembre31 décembre et 1er janvier et tous les lundisOffice de tourisme : place du marché Couvert - 02300 Chauny - Tel : 03.23.52.10.79