Getty
8 Nov 2018
French Jews have reacted in horror at
reports President Emmanuel Macron will honor Marshal Philippe Pétain, the
disgraced Nazi collaborator who authorised the deportation of tens of thousands of Jews to death camps.
Marshal Petain’s name appears
alongside seven other military chiefs to be honored Saturday in a ceremony at
the Invalides monument, site of Napoleon’s tomb, to mark the centenary of the
end of World War 1.
Petain led the French army to victory
in Verdun in 1916, but gained lasting infamy and a conviction for treason for
his leadership of Nazi-sanctioned Vichy France during World War II.
In 1940, with France under attack
from Germany, Pétain was appointed vice-premier. He later asked for an
armistice, upon which he was appointed “chief of state”, enjoying almost
absolute powers.
The armistice gave the Germans
control over the north and west of France, including Paris, but left the
remainder as a separate regime under Pétain.
Officially neutral, in practice the
regime collaborated closely with Germany, and brought in its own anti-Semitic
legislation.
Touring battlefields ahead of a
formal commemoration of the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the war, Macron
said Petain was still worthy of the honor for his leading role in the World War
I victory despite his later record.
“Marshal Petain was also a great
soldier during World War I” even though he made “fatal choices during the
Second World War,” Macron said in the northern town of Charleville-Mezieres.
“I consider it entirely legitimate
that we pay homage to the marshals who led our army to victory,” Mr Macron
continued.
France’s leading Jewish organisation,
Crif, responded immediately, telling the Associated Press it was “shocked” at the
decision.
Crif leader Francis Kalifat said,
“the only thing we remember about Philippe Petain is that he was, in the name
of the French people, held in national disgrace during his trial in July 1945.
“I am shocked that we can honour a
man who, it must be remembered, was himself responsible for the deportation of
Jews from France, including the Vel’ d’Hiv raid .”
France’s participation and
responsibility in the Holocaust has long been a sensitive issue in France
and was only officially recognised in 1995 by then president Jacques Chirac.
In 1995 he admitted that Petain’s
Vichy puppet government was the French state. Chirac spoke at the Vel’ d’Hiv
cycling stadium in Paris, known for a 1942 roundup of French Jews that saw
13,000 people deported to Nazi concentration camps, a third of them children.
Fewer than 100 were to survive the
war.
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