Chicago Sun-Times

Iconic feminist politician survived Nazi death camps

- BY ANGELA CHARLTON

PARIS — Simone Veil, a survivor of Nazi death camps and a European Parliament president who spearheade­d abortion rights as one of France’s most prominent female politician­s, died Friday at 89, her family said.

A funeral ceremony with military honors is to be held on Wednesday at Les Invalides, site of Napoleon’s tomb, the presidenti­al Elysee Palace said. In a measure of the nation’s esteem for Veil, French flags will be dressed in black ribbons and European flags will fly at half- staff.

“May her example inspire our compatriot­s,” President Emmanuel Macron tweeted.

“France has lost a figure that history rarely produces,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said, as tributes to the centrist Veil poured in from across the political spectrum.

Veil said it was her experience­s in the Nazi concentrat­ion camps that made her a firm believer in the unificatio­n of Europe.

“The idea of war was for me something terrible,” she told The Associated Press in a 2007 interview. “The only possible option was to make peace.”

Her own rise from a former deportee to the head of the European Parliament was a potent symbol of that sought- after peace, she said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, offering condolence­s in a message to Veil’s son, said shewas “very grateful” for Veil’s commitment to European unificatio­n.

“We will also remember her tireless … commitment to the survivors of the Holocaust, whose fate she shared,” Merkel wrote.

A two- time Cabinet minister, Veil was best known in France for leading the heated battle to legalize abortion in the 1970s. France’s abortion rights law is still known four decades later as the “Loi Veil,” and she called it her proudest accomplish­ment.

In a country where many women are hesitant to call themselves feminists, Veil embraced the label. She saw herself as an advocate for the downtrodde­n and devoted much of her early career to improving conditions in French prisons. Later, she became one of the most visible faces of France’s dwindling community of Holocaust survivors and spoke passionate­ly about the need to keep the memory alive.

Born Simone Jacob in the Mediterran­ean port of Nice on July 13, 1927, she was one of four children. Her father worked as an architect until a 1941 law by France’s collaborat­ionist Vichy government forced him— and other Jews — out of the profession.

In March 1944, the Gestapo arrested and deported Veil, her parents and all but one of her siblings. The 16- year- old Veil, her sister and her mother ended up at the death camps at Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Her father and brother were sent to a camp in a Baltic country. They were never seen again.

“I found myself thrown into a universe of death, humiliatio­n and barbarism,” Veil wrote in the preface to a 2005 book on the Holocaust. “I am still haunted by the images, the odors, the screams, the humiliatio­n, the blows and the sky, ashen with the smoke from the crematoriu­ms.”

Young and healthy when she entered Birkenau and with striking chestnut plaits, Veil caught the eye of a Polish woman who helped run the camp. The woman took her aside, telling her in broken French: “‘ You are too pretty to die here. I am going to find some way so you can survive,’” Veil told the AP.

The woman sent Veil, her mother and sister to work at a Siemens factory outside the camp. Later, Veil was transferre­d to work in an SS kitchen, where she was able to pilfer bits of food for her mother.

Her efforts were in vain. Veil’s mother died of typhus at the Bergen- Belsen camp. Veil’s sister survived the camp, returning to France along with Veil after the war.

Upon her return, Veil pursued a law degree at Paris’ prestigiou­s Institut d’Etudes Politiques. There she met Antoine Veil, a public servant, and the two married in 1946.

Simone Veil became a judge and worked for seven years in France’s department of correction­s, where she fought to improve prison conditions.

“Having had my freedom taken away gave me a real sense of empathy for prisoners,” Veil said.

In 1974, center- right President Valery Giscard d’Estaing plucked her out of relative obscurity, appointing her health minister — to her surprise. The appointmen­t thrust her into the center of the fight over abortion, which Giscard d’Estaing had pledged to legalize.

The most visible proponent of the controvers­ial legislatio­n, Veil quickly became the target of vicious, personal attacks as the battle over the bill raged in the legislatur­e. One anti- abortion lawmaker’s comment that Veil “wanted to send children to the ovens” famously reduced her to tears.

Veil again served as French health minister from 1993- 1995 under Prime Minister Edouard Balladur.

In 1979, Veil ran in the European Parliament’s first popular elections on the Center for Europe party ticket. Fellow lawmakers elected her president, making her the first woman to head the legislatur­e. She served as president until 1982 and remained in the Parliament until 1993.

Veil returned to Auschwitz to commemorat­e the 60th anniversar­y of its liberation in January 2005. By then, Auschwitz “was just a bunch of crumbling buildings,” she told the AP. “Without the people doing the killing, it was no longer a frightenin­g place.”

 ?? | PHILIPPE WOPJAZER, POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Simone Veil, dressed in the French Academicia­n’s uniform, poses in the library of the Institut de France before a ceremony in Paris.
| PHILIPPE WOPJAZER, POOL PHOTO VIA AP Simone Veil, dressed in the French Academicia­n’s uniform, poses in the library of the Institut de France before a ceremony in Paris.

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