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  • 1
    Article
    Article
    In:  Vingtième Siècle; revue d'histoire 119 (2013) 29-41
    Language: French
    Year of publication: 2013
    Titel der Quelle: Vingtième Siècle; revue d'histoire
    Angaben zur Quelle: 119 (2013) 29-41
    Keywords: Zelman, Annette ; Intermarriage ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Jewish women in the Holocaust
    Abstract: In light of the fate of the aspiring Jewish writer Annette Zelman, traces the two-month period of "reprisals", anarchic exercise of power, and arbitrary decisions which preceded the Final Solution in France in July 1942. Zelman was born in 1921 in Nancy, and went to Paris to study art in 1940. She befriended artists and intellectuals at Café de Flore, where she also met her fiancé, the non-Jewish poet Jean Jausion. Jausion's parents opposed the marriage and denounced Zelman, who was arrested by the Gestapo in May 1942 on order of Theodore Dannecker. She was interned as a political prisoner for a month, and deported with 65 other women to Auschwitz, where she died under unknown circumstances. Highlights the arbitrariness of her arrest, since mixed marriages were not forbidden and French Jews were usually spared. Argues that her arrest took place at a key moment in the history of the Final Solution in France: no rules had yet been established for the deportation of Jews, and the convoy of women that was sent to Auschwitz by Dannecker was the first of its kind. Zelman's fiancé was killed in the resistance, but a novel he wrote based on his personal story, "Un homme marche dans la ville", was published in 1945 and made into a film in 1949.
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  • 2
    Language: French
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Vichy, les Français et la Shoah; un état de la connaissance scientifique
    Angaben zur Quelle: 212 (2020) 153-181
    Keywords: Laval, Pierre, ; Lévy, Claude, Correspondence ; Chambrun, René de, Correspondence ; World War, 1939-1945 Deportations from France ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: La Grande Rafle du Vél d’Hiv by Claude Lévy and Paul Tillard was published in May 1967. This inquiry about the roundup that took place in Paris on July 16, 1942 caused a sensation (enthusiastic press, strong sales, etc.). What it revealed shocked public opinion—especially the role the Vichy head of government, Pierre Laval, played in handing over thousands of Jewish children born in France to the Nazis. For the first time, the anti-Semitic crimes of the Pétainist regime were widely covered by the media. Laval’s son-in-law, René de Chambrun, was incensed by the book and wrote to one of the authors, Claude Lévy. Lévy responded. These letters showcased the revisionist rhetoric about Vichy’s anti-Jewish policy that was popular in 1967. At the time, new information was emerging thanks to researchers who saw it as their role to speak on behalf of the victims. This article provides a historical context to these letters and examines this period, which had a pivotal effect on both history and memory.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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