|
|
|
division of France into Occupied and Unoccupied
Zones, although they remain for some administrative reasons and are now known
as the Northern and Southern Zones. However, the Vichy government continues to
claim authority throughout France in all except security matters.
November 23, 1942. A Nazi army of 22 divisions is encircled on
the Volga River at Stalingrad by a counterattacking Soviet army. Ordered by
Hitler to fight to the last man, the Germans are besieged and the Stalingrad
battle becomes a symbol of resistance and a portent of eventual Nazi defeat.
The remnants of the Nazis' Stalingrad army 90,000 men surrender on
January 31, 1943.
November 27, 1942. Threatened with seizure by
German forces completing their occupation of France, the French fleet scuttles
itself in the harbor of Toulon. Among the ships sent to the bottom are 10
cruisers, 28 destroyers, and 14 submarines.
December 31, 1942.
By the end of 1942, 41,951 Jews have been deported from France in 43 convoys to
the extermination camp of Auschwitz. Of this total, 24,361 are put to death in
the gas chambers immediately upon arrival in the camp, and 11,565 men and5,962
women are selected for work. At the war's end in 1945, 784 men and 21 women
deported in 1942 survive.
1943
|
January 5, 1943. André
Baur, vice president of the UGIF, writes to the CGQJ in response to its request
for information on the children's centers operated by the UGIF:
The number of beds which we have available
in various homes has grown to 414, of which 386 are presently occupied. We are
obliged to keep a certain number of beds free to be able to receive children
who are continually being sent to us, either by prefectures outside Paris or by
internment camps, and whom we must accept from one day to the next.
As
a result we are setting up family placements, which will permit us only to make
room in our homes. Family placements (both official and
clandestine) are arranged by the UGIF's Service Number 5 and make it possible
to remove many children from the UGIF centers, where they are in danger. Most
of these children had been arrested prior to coming under UGIF care, and if the
UGIF centers did not exist they would have remained in Drancy and would have
been deported. Many children helped by the UGIF never even enter a UGIF center
there were only seven, whose total capacity never exceeded 400 beds
but are "placed" with families immediately, without leaving a trace. On
January 5, 386 beds are occupied, but by August 2 the number is down to 166.
Forty-two children will be arrested in the centers during roundups on February
10-11, 1943, but others will be spirited away, thanks to family placements
speeded in response to the roundups.
January 21, 1943. Knochen
cables Eichmann from the Gestapo's Jewish Affairs Department in Paris to ask
whether transportation can be provided for deportation of 1,200 Jews currently
held at Drancy. He notes that the Drancy roster totals 3,811 Jews, but that
2,159 of them are French citizens. Can the French Jews now be deported? Knochen
asks. (In fact, French Jews already have been
|
|
|
| |
|
FRENCH
CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST A memorial Serge Klarsfeld
|
Back |
Page 67 |
Forward |
|
|