Wartime
Wednesday:
Lucie Aubrac of the French Resistance
As often mentioned, for my book research I read
memoirs and autobiographies and watch interviews of oral history reports. Over
and over again, I’m stunned by the stories of ordinary people performing
extraordinary deeds.
One such person was Lucie Aubrac (nee Bernard), a bright
woman who obtained the “aggrégation” in history, the most prestigious higher
degree in France. She obtained a job teaching history at a school in
Strasbourg. In 1939, she met and married Raymond Samuel, an engineer who had
recently returned from a year abroad at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
After the Germans occupied the northern portion of
France, the couple moved south to Lyon. Recruited by journalist Emmanuel d’Astier
de la Vigerie, Lucie joined the resistance movement in Free France and with her
husband was one of the four founders of Libération-Sud (Liberation-South). The
following year, the group performed two sabotage attacks at train stations in
Perpignan and Cannes. Shortly thereafter, they distributed 10,000 propaganda
flyers, but one of the distributors was caught, leading to the arrest of d’Astier’s
niece and uncle.
Libération-Sud decided to lie low, and perhaps this
was when Lucie and Raymond decided to take on the nom de guerre Aubrac which they would retain after the end of the
war.
It wasn’t long before the group was active again, one
of their activities to create an underground newspaper, Libération. In May 1941, Lucie gave birth to her first child, and
later stated that being the mother of a baby was an excellent cover to divert
suspicion from the Germans. Her memoirs share an anecdote about a meeting
between Samuel and de Gaulle’s envoy, Jean Moulin, in a Lyon public garden where
her presence with the baby “proved particularly useful.”
Fast forward to March 1943. Samuel was arrested, so Lucie
marched into the office of the local Vichy public prosecutor and managed to get
him released. Two months later he was arrested again. This time, she went
straight to the top and visited Klaus Barbie. She claimed to be Samuel’s fiancée,
and that he had been caught as an innocent bystander. She asked to marry him
because she was pregnant with their child. Barbie showed her the file of
pictures he had on her, that included a photo of her with her first child, then
threw her out of his office.
Days later, she made another attempt…this time with a
lower level Nazi prosecutor who didn’t know about her conversation with Barbie.
Later she would say, “This guy was a collaborator, and therefore, a coward. If
I spoke louder than him, I was sure to win.” Whether it was her words or her bribe,
he granted the request. After the ceremony, Lucie led armed Resistance members
in an attack on the convoy of cars and rescued Samuel and fifteen other
prisoners.
Needless to say, it was now time for Lucie and Samuel to
go into hiding. It was a long eight months. They were not able to secure
passage to London until February 1944. Three days later, Lucie gave birth to
their daughter, Catherine.
In 1984, she published a semi-fictional version of her
wartime diaries that would be made into a movie in 1997.
LOVE the French Resistance! They shine like jewels in a very dark time.
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