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[chil
] dren into the Unoccupied Zone in the
south and in many cases on into neutral Switzerland became a
constant OSE activity.
Benefiting from the less restrictive conditions
in the Vichy Zone, OSE established an extensive system of social-medical
centers in the south, locating them in such cities as Marseilles, Lyons,
Grenoble, Montpellier, Perigueux, Toulouse, Limoges, Nice, and Chambéry.
The first of these centers, in Marseilles, was opened in June 1941 with the aid
of the Unitarian Service Committee. Provided with medical and dental clinics,
it owed its importance both to an influx of refugees into the city and to its
proximity to the internment camp at Les Milles. Lyons, the first OSE center to
engage in clandestine activity, was opened in November 1941; in April 1942 it
began issuing false identity papers to foreign Jews, who were the first group
subjected to anti-Jewish measures in France. Limoges, with hospitable
authorities and local population, became another key OSE center.
When
the Vichy government began interning Jewish families in camps in 1940, OSE
workers took up residence in the camps, setting up medical facilities,
child-welfare centers, even libraries, and working to improve sanitation. They
often managed to provide dietary supplements, particularly for children and the
sick. They coordinated the work of various organizations, both Jewish and non-
Jewish, whose representatives visited or worked in the camps.
After
repeated approaches to Vichy authorities and thanks to sympathetic
responses by some of them between November 1941 and May 1942 OSE
obtained the release from the camps of several hundred children under the age
of 15 and of many older teenagers. To be released, children were required to
have a residence permit authorized by the prefect of the department in which
they were to be lodged. The Hérault prefect and his staff issued many of
these permits at a time when few officials would do so. Thus, Montpellier, seat
of the Hérault Department, became a center for efforts to free interned
children; the surrounding countryside saw the creation of "vacation camps,"
which were the first step toward hiding the children. In the summer of 1941,
OSE set up a shelter for released children at Palavas-les-Flots, on the
Mediterranean coast near Montpellier; it soon became a way-station through
which children passed en route to other homes. And once the children's status
had been made legal in Hérault, it was easy to shift them to other
departments, because moving those 15 or younger did not require additional
formalities. In a similar way through an oversight, whether intentional
or not at the prefecture in Perpignan it was possible to obtain the
release of a large number of adolescents over 15. They were sheltered, for the
most part, by the EIF (Eclaireurs Israélites de France Jewish Boy
Scouts of France).
By 1942 there were 14 OSE homes in operation,
housing more than 1,000 children on a rotating basis. These homes were staffed
by OSE workers and young women from the Jewish youth movements many of
whom had arrived in France shortly before the war as nurses and social
workers; and by teachers and doctors who had been dismissed from their posts
under Vichy's anti-Jewish laws.
The forced incorporation of OSE into
the UGIF-South, ordered by Vichy's Commissariat-General for Jewish Affairs in
March 1942, widened a split between UGIF's focus on
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FRENCH
CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST A memorial Serge Klarsfeld
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