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Paul Hauet - son Livre ouvert ! The Haennig-Nordmann Papers: Two Lawyers in Occupied France
Roger Marcel Fortier, born in 1922, mechanic, domiciled in La Courneuve, member of aero-club at Aubervilliers, arrested 30 December 1940. (Cited in German documents n° 12-14, 18, 1941). He was deported from Paris on 9 October 1942 to KL Sachsenhausen, where he was released on 22 April 1945.
Georges Friedmann (1902-1977), Marxist and sociologist, removed from his teaching post in Toulouse by Vichy, introduced in Paris by Humbert to Vildé, responsible for the Resistance journal in the Free Zone, and after the group is arrested, he went into hiding. Cited in German document n° 12 and in Humbert's memoirs, op. cit. After the promulgation of the Jewish Statute in October 1940, Humbert protected his apartment and his library. This protection and her correspondence with Friedmann are cited by Blanc, op. cit.
Albert Gaveau, born in Angers in 1901. He was a former aviation instructor, alias "Ameline", infiltrated into the Resistance group by SS Captain Doehring who paid him 2.000 Francs per month. Gaveau's German born mother was related to Doehring's secretary. Miss Hubner. Cited in German documents n° 12-14, 1941 and in Nordmann s letter, n° 34, 1942. Arrested in November 1945, he was tried for betraying the Resistance group, defended by Jean-Louis TixierVignancourt who managed to avoid the death penalty for him. Gaveau was sentenced on 5 November 1949 to hard labor for life and incarcerated in the prison of Clairvaux. On 23 November 1953 his sentence was reduced to 20 years hard labor. He was freed in 1965. (French National Archives AN.Z6/810.5677).
Colonel Paul Hauet (1866-1945) was deported from Compiegne on 28 July 1944 to Kl Neuengamme, n° 402224, where he died on 31 January 1945.
Daniel Hericault (1910-?), former pilot. He introduced Gaveau to Vildé, and brought stencils for the tracts to Aubervilliers. He was arrested by the Germans on 17 January 1941 and accused of antiGerman propaganda. He was acquitted in 1942. (Transcribed as Hericauld in German documents n° 12, n° 13,1941).
Agnès Humbert (1894-1963), art historian and ethnographer, imprisoned at the Prison du Cherche-Midi, found guilty of diverse crimes against Germany, sentenced to 5 years forced labor in 1942. Her defense lawyer was a woman lawyer Maitre Christo, chosen by her mother. Cited in German documents n° 12-17, 1941. She was deported on 16 February 1942 to the prisons of Karlsruhe, Anrath, Krefeld and Giitersloh, and the camps of Schwelm and Wanfried where she was liberated on 3 April 1945.
Jacques Ghémard le lundi 05 février 2024 - Demander un contact La page d'origine de cette contribution Recherche sur cette contribution | |