Millennium Post

French Resistance hero Cecile Rol-tanguy dies at age 101

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PARIS: French Resistance member Cecile Rol-tanguy, who risked her life during World War II by working to liberate Paris from Nazi occupation, has died.

She was 101. Rol-tanguy died on Friday at her home in Monteaux, in central France, as Europe commemorat­ed the 75th anniversar­y of the surrender of Nazi Germany to Allied forces. The cause of her death was not disclosed by French officials. French President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to Rol-tanguy on Saturday, calling her a “freedom fighter”.

Rol-tanguy joined the Resistance at age 21, typing out calls for rebellion on the day German troops occupied Paris in June 1940, with her husband, Henri Rol-tanguy, who became a prominent fighter in the French Resistance, she started living a dangerous and clandestin­e existence as a liaison officer for the French Forces of the Interior (FFI).

The couple had to hide their relationsh­ip to keep their activities secret and use fake identities. She later recalled how she used their children’s strollers to transport messages, weapons and explosive material.

In August 1944, when her husband was the leader of FFI fighters in the Paris region, she worked alongside him to set up a command post in an undergroun­d shelter in central Paris. On August 19, 1944, they wrote and published a pamphlet calling citizens to arms in Paris. The French capital was liberated six days later.

When Resistance leader Charles de Gaulle marched in a victory parade down the Champs-elysees on August 26, 1945, Rol-tanguy was the only woman at the reception the general gave to thank the Parisian fighters.

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