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The Holocaust History Project.

FRENCH CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST

A memorial
Serge Klarsfeld  

 
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religious practice made them difficult to blend into a non-Jewish background – and thus whose safety in France could be little more than an illusion.

Groups of six to ten children, brought together in Grenoble or Chambéry and accompanied by OSE guides, followed one another across the Swiss border at regular intervals. The pace was stepped up around the time Italy surrendered to the Allies and the Italian occupation of southeastern France crumbled in September 1943; beginning in August, two and sometimes three groups per week, each now made up of 12 to 25 children, were led from Lyons to Aix-les-Bains and from there on to Annemasse, near the border between France and Switzerland. Following the Italian capitulation, German guards were posted at the border; crossings were immediately suspended, but were resumed within three months.

A second, separate child-rescue operation was based in Nice. Anticipating what might happen if Italian occupation ended and the Germans took over the city, a Syrian Jewish student, Moussa Abadi – aided by the bishop of Nice, Monseigneur Paul Rémond, and Maurice Brener of the Joint Distribution Committee – set up a network covering all of Nice and extending to Cannes and other cities and towns in the region. With the close cooperation of OSE, whose social workers gathered children from hunted Jewish families, more than 400 more children were hidden in the south and saved.

The Nice OSE center played an important role in rescue efforts when the Germans entered that city in September, and an SS team led by Aloïs Brunner began hunting down Jews with ferocity. The center's social and medical services could not be maintained, but some 50 children were smuggled to safety during the roundups. Within weeks, however, the Gestapo raided the OSE offices, arresting everyone found there.

Faced with German determination to deport and kill every Jew who could be found, adult or child, OSE decided that it was time to empty the group homes and close them after hiding the children. The social-medical centers continued working to maintain lines of assistance to the nearly 1,500 children living with their families or in institutions dependent on OSE help.

To help cover the children's tracks, OSE handed over the closed homes to local authorities and institutions. When the evacuation of several homes was delayed, OSE carried on limited above-ground activities until the safety of the last children could be assured. This period of marking time came to a brutal end with Gestapo raids on OSE offices in Grenoble and other cities and, on February 8, 1944, on OSE headquarters in Chambéry, where seven staff members and many visitors were arrested. All of the organization's offices and social-medical centers were closed after the Chambéry raid, and OSE's legal activities came to an end.

In a March 30 report to its representatives in Switzerland, OSE declared: "The closing of the children's homes is complete. All of the children have been sent to secure places." (See March 30, 1944, entry in the History and Chronology section).

OSE's closing of its homes gave added protection to the children at a time when the deteriorating German military position in 1944 brought a wave of Resistance attacks and brutal responses by the Germans and the Vichy
    
   

FRENCH CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST

A memorial
Serge Klarsfeld

 
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