Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Paris marks liberation 70 years ago

Tributes to celebrate freedom from Hitler’s Third Reich

- ELAINE GANLEY

PARIS — Her code name was Rainer, and she had a gun she called Oscar. Not yet 20, she aimed her weapon at a Nazi officer and shot him to death on a Paris bridge on a Sunday afternoon.

That deed on July 23, 1944, was Madeleine Riffaud’s summons to Parisians to rise up.

“Everyone saw that a young girl on a bicycle can do this,” she recalled in an interview.

Riffaud’s solitary act represente­d an opening salvo for a popular uprising in Paris, which was spurred by the Allied landings in Normandy following four years of Nazi occupation. When American and French troops liberated the city on Aug. 25, 1944, it came against a backdrop of jubilation and chaos.

On Monday, Paris will mark the 70th anniversar­y of its freedom from Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich with a day of tributes, including an outdoor ball, a speech at City Hall by President Francois Hollande and a sound and light show re-enacting the day of liberation.

The commemorat­ion underscore­s how much has changed in a Europe, and a wider world, that is confrontin­g new dangers with echoes of the past.

“I think there is a certain degree of forgetting precisely what the right wing across Europe in the 1930s actually meant,” said University of Nottingham historian Karen Adler, who draws a parallel between that dark time and the rise of far-right parties across much of Europe today.

Some Parisian elders who lived through the occupation now advocate unity and dialogue among Europeans to ensure that extremism can never take hold of the continent again.

“What happened was monstrous,” said Jacqueline Courret, now 85 and living at the Liberty rest home in Paris.

During the occupation, Courret lived in a predominan­tly Jewish neighborho­od on the Rue de Rivoli. She recalled how the Nazis’ regular roundups of Jews meant that her school eventually closed because so many pupils had disappeare­d, including a friend. Some 77,320 Jews were deported from France during the war.

From 1940 to 1944, a European capital that had epitomized culture, bounty and the sweet life fell to its knees as humiliatio­n, hunger, cold and distrust became the measures of daily life. Long food lines, black markets and coveted ration tickets marked the memories of those years.

Courret and two other women at the Liberty care home described how agebased food tickets determined their daily rations. Potatoes, rutabagas, soup and milk for the children were standard fare. Meat was a delicacy. Sometimes, Courret said, her parents served up cat meat.

“There wasn’t a cat left in Paris at the end of the war,” she said, chuckling.

Scarcity bred a thriving black market for goods, some smuggled from the countrysid­e. Parisians honed their bargaining skills.

“One person had shoes; another had butter. We bartered,” said Josepha Bercau, 93. Her family’s fabric store helped put food on the table by trading fabric or clothes, some made from curtains.

When their silk stockings failed, ladies resorted to using make-up on their legs to imitate the look of the stockings.

Yet worries about whom to trust tainted relations and snuffed out the legendary ambiance of the city. Fears that neighbors could be collaborat­ing with the Germans restrained conversati­ons. Identifyin­g the collaborat­ors was no easy task.

“Collaborat­ion works at so many levels. It was every state agency, if you like, every ministry, every government agency,” Adler said.

Paris police carried out the Nazis’ tasks until they rebelled Aug. 19 as the uprising spread six days before the liberation.

Riffaud, who turned 90 on Saturday, carried out more daring feats. As a member of a Paris resistance group of medical students, she put pamphlets in mailboxes and passed secret messages using the numbers on Metro tickets as a code.

When Riffaud shot the German officer, she said, she waited until he turned — so that he wouldn’t be shot in the back. She was arrested, tortured and eventually freed in a prisoner exchange.

“We always knew we couldn’t win alone,” she said.

The D-Day invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944, fueled the fervor of Parisians and opened the way for American troops of the 4th American Infantry Division to march on Paris alongside the 2nd French Armored Division.

“All the emotions suppressed by four years of German domination surged through the people,” Don Whitehead wrote on Aug. 25, 1944, in the first eyewitness account of the liberation. That joy was immortaliz­ed in iconic photos showing young ladies kissing American soldiers.

Whitehead’s dispatch describes the liberation as messy, chaotic and dangerous with shooting from Germans making their last stand.

“Machine guns and rifles cracked on all sides as the column I was with drove within a block of the Luxembourg [Gardens],” Whitehead wrote.

Riffaud saw one of her comrades fall dead from a gunshot wound at the Place de la Republique.

“Everyone was hugging and kissing,” she said. “People were happy. All the while, we were picking up dead bodies.”

 ?? AP/BERT BRANDT ?? French girls mob American soldiers as they roll into Paris in this photo taken Aug. 28, 1944.
AP/BERT BRANDT French girls mob American soldiers as they roll into Paris in this photo taken Aug. 28, 1944.
 ?? AP/MICHEL EULER ?? Madeleine Riffaud holds a book, with a photo of her on the cover, that she wrote about her World War II adventures as code-name Rainer.
AP/MICHEL EULER Madeleine Riffaud holds a book, with a photo of her on the cover, that she wrote about her World War II adventures as code-name Rainer.

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