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Dreyfus relative: he was 'completely broken' by affair

July 13, 2012 09:14

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

Alfred Dreyfus, the French officer accused of treason in one of the most notorious episodes of institutional antisemitism in history, owed his eventual exoneration to the efforts of many, including writer Emile Zola.

But according to his great granddaughter, the artillery officer's survival was guaranteed by his wife Lucie, who was 24 when he was convicted of treason and exiled to Devil's Island.

"She was just wonderful," said Yael Perl Ruiz, whose mother was 18 when Dreyfus died. "Without Lucie I think he would have died. She never believed it even for one minute. She was very clever because she instilled in him that she need him and 'if you die I will die also, so then you have to live'.

"So that's why he began to fight, for his children and for his wife."