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Village that defied the Nazis

The little heralded heroism of a small French community enabled 3,500 Jews to survive, a new book reveals

August 28, 2014 11:30
28082014 Chambon

BySimon Round, Simon Round

4 min read

In the catalogue of genocide and barbarism that was the Holocaust there were heartwarming instances of people and communities risking their lives to rescue Jews. One thinks of the rescue of Danish Jews, the work of Oskar Schindler and many other cases of individual bravery. However, one of the largest, best organised and remarkable rescues has barely registered on the radar, despite the fact that the people of a small French village and its surrounding area managed to protect thousands of Jews throughout the war.

The efforts of the inhabitants of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon have not gone unnoticed at official level - it is one of only two villages in Europe to be given the accolade of Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem. However, the villagers' heroics remain little known, even by their own countrymen.

Australian author Peter Grose is attempting to correct matters in his book, The Greatest Escape, which tells the story of the indefatigable villagers and their efforts to save around 3,500 Jewish lives.

The experience of French Jews in the Second World War was a mixed one. A large proportion found a way to survive but more than 70,000 were deported to the death camps, many with the enthusiastic assistance of their countrymen. In the so-called unoccupied portion of France administered by Marshal Philippe Petain's Vichy government, the anti-Jewish edicts of his regime were actually more draconian than those formulated by the Nazis themselves. Yet in the enclave of Le Chambon, sometimes referred to as The Plateau, things were different. The Protestant inhabitants of the area were descended from Huguenots, who had their own history of persecution and a consequent sympathy for the plight of the Jews. The town's pastor was a remarkable man named Andre Trocme who preached non-violent resistance against the Nazis. He instigated the rescue and sheltering of Jews and his actions were endorsed and copied by thousands in the area.