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Rieucros Camp

The Rieucros Camp [ʁjø.kʁo] was an internment camp on a forested hillside near Mende in the French department of Lozère that operated from January 1939 to February 1942.[1] Prime Minister Édouard Daladier established the camp by decree on January 21, 1939, to isolate members of the International Brigades from French society after the defeat of the Second Spanish Republic and subsequent exile, known as la Retirada, in the Spanish Civil War. Other "suspicious and undesirable foreign men," sometimes accused of common law crimes, were also interned. After France's entry into World War II, authorities transferred the men to the camp of le Vernet and began to intern "suspicious and undesirable foreign women" in October 1939.[2] Following the Battle of France, Rieucros fell in the southern unoccupied zone and the Vichy regime assumed control of the camp from Third Republican authorities. In February 1942, authorities transferred the entire camp population of women and children to the camp of Brens.

Rieucros
Concentration camp
Location of Rieucros within France
Coordinates44°31′38″N 3°28′55″E / 44.5271°N 3.4819°E / 44.5271; 3.4819Coordinates: 44°31′38″N 3°28′55″E / 44.5271°N 3.4819°E / 44.5271; 3.4819
LocationMende, Occitania, France
Built byFrench Third Republic
Operated byFrench Third Republic, Vichy France
Original useCamp for Spanish refugees
Operationalto 13 February 1942
InmatesFormer International Brigadiers, German opponents of Nazism, Italians, Eastern European Jews, Polish forced labourers; French female communists, anarchists and prostitutes
Number of inmatesthousands
Notable inmatesIda Mett, Dora Schaul, Alexander Grothendieck, Michel del Castillo, Lenka Reinerová,

Background

In the late 1930s, the French Third Republic increasingly restricted immigration as increasing numbers of political refugees fled ascendant European dictatorships.[3] Prime Minister Édouard Daladier of the Radical Party circumvented Parliament to issue a series of decree laws that closed avenues of legal immigration and punished illegal immigration in 1938 and 1939, reversing the nation's tradition of being a country of asylum.[4] Daladier's decree of November 12, 1938 gave the state the power to intern foreigners in camps.

As the Spanish Civil War came to a close in the first months of 1939, the armies of soon to be dictator Francisco Franco drove nearly 500,000 refugees north across the border with France.[5] The French Third Republic responded by creating a series of internment camps to house and confine the refugees, the first of which was Rieucros. Historians cite French fears of social revolution and civil war,[6] xenophobia, and the notion that foreign antifascists fleeing Franco, Mussolini, and Hitler wanted to draw France into another European war "to satisfy their personal lust for revenge"[7] as motivating factors for France's hostile reception of refugees during this time. As a result, the majority of the interned populations in France on the eve of World War II were the first victims and opponents of European fascism, allowing for a near seamless takeover by the collaborationist Vichy regime when the Third Republic fell to Nazi Germany in June 1940.

Internees

The following people were interned in the camp of Rieucros:

Memorial Association

L'Association pour le souvenir de Rieucros is a memorial association established on August 12, 1992, with the goal "to preserve the memory of the suffering of the camp's internees but also to study the causes leading to the creation of such a camp in the recent past."[12] Members of the Association include former internees and their surviving family members, among others. The association engages in educational and commemorative activities, including preserving the site of the camp, creating informative historical plaques, and participating in an annual commemorative ceremony on July 16, the National Day of Remembrance for Victims of Racist and Antisemitic Persecution on the anniversary of the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup.

Few traces remain of the camp. The barracks and barbed wire have disappeared. The most significant vestige of the camp today is a carved rock that depicts a soldier with a gun and the dates 1789 and 1939, marking the 150th anniversary of the French Revolution. A nearby rock bears the inscription "Gierke, Walter," a former internee of the camp who may have sculpted the memorial.[13]

Further reading

Literature and Memoirs

  • Michel del Castillo, Tanguy (1957)
  • Isabel del Castillo, El Incendio: Ideas y Recuerdos (1954)
  • Vera T. Mirsky, The Cup of Astonishment (1944)
  • Lenka Reinerova, Promenade au lac des cygnes (2004, French translation)
  • Dora Schaul, Résistance - Erinnerungen deutscher Antifaschisten (1973)

Non-Fiction

  • Mechtild Gilzmer, Fraueninternierungslager in Südfrankreich : Rieucros und Brens 1939-1944 (1994 original in German), and Camps de femmes. Chroniques d'internées Rieucros et Brens (1939-1944) (2000 translation by Nicole Bary to French)
  • Sandrine Peyrac, Le camp d'internement de Rieucros, 1939-1942 : l'internement, de la République à l'état français (2008)
  • Denis Peschanski, La France des camps: l'internement 1938-1946 (2002)

References

  1. ^ The US Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives holds a digitized copy of selections from the Departmental Archives of Lozère that relate to the camp, finding aid here: http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn35835
  2. ^ Gilzmer, Mechtild (2000). Camp des femmes. Croniques d'internées, Rieucros et Brens, 1939-1944. Paris: Autrement.
  3. ^ Maga, Timothy P. (1982). "Closing the Door: The French Government and Refugee Policy, 1933-1939". French Historical Studies. 12 (3): 424–442. doi:10.2307/286530. JSTOR 286530.
  4. ^ Kirchheimer, Otto (1940). "Decree Powers and Constitutional Law in France under the Third Republic". The American Political Science Review. 34 (6): 1104–1123. doi:10.2307/1948192. JSTOR 1948192.
  5. ^ Louis Stein, Beyond Death and Exile. The Spanish Republicans in France, 1939-1955 (1979)
  6. ^ Stein, Beyond Death and Exile, page 45
  7. ^ Maud Mandel, In the Aftermath of Genocide: Armenians and Jews in Twentieth-Century France, (2003), page 42
  8. ^ "Mett, Ida, 1901-1973".
  9. ^ Castillo, Isabel del (1954). "El incendio: Ideas y recuerdos".
  10. ^ "Dans les camps de Pétain, il était une jeune femme, Angelita".
  11. ^ L’étrange voyage de Teresa Noce à Rieucros Regards croisés sur l’enfermement et l’exclusion
  12. ^ "Accueil".
  13. ^ "Biographies d'hommes internés".

rieucros, camp, ʁjø, kʁo, internment, camp, forested, hillside, near, mende, french, department, lozère, that, operated, from, january, 1939, february, 1942, prime, minister, Édouard, daladier, established, camp, decree, january, 1939, isolate, members, intern. The Rieucros Camp ʁjo kʁo was an internment camp on a forested hillside near Mende in the French department of Lozere that operated from January 1939 to February 1942 1 Prime Minister Edouard Daladier established the camp by decree on January 21 1939 to isolate members of the International Brigades from French society after the defeat of the Second Spanish Republic and subsequent exile known as la Retirada in the Spanish Civil War Other suspicious and undesirable foreign men sometimes accused of common law crimes were also interned After France s entry into World War II authorities transferred the men to the camp of le Vernet and began to intern suspicious and undesirable foreign women in October 1939 2 Following the Battle of France Rieucros fell in the southern unoccupied zone and the Vichy regime assumed control of the camp from Third Republican authorities In February 1942 authorities transferred the entire camp population of women and children to the camp of Brens RieucrosConcentration campLocation of Rieucros within FranceCoordinates44 31 38 N 3 28 55 E 44 5271 N 3 4819 E 44 5271 3 4819 Coordinates 44 31 38 N 3 28 55 E 44 5271 N 3 4819 E 44 5271 3 4819LocationMende Occitania FranceBuilt byFrench Third RepublicOperated byFrench Third Republic Vichy FranceOriginal useCamp for Spanish refugeesOperationalto 13 February 1942InmatesFormer International Brigadiers German opponents of Nazism Italians Eastern European Jews Polish forced labourers French female communists anarchists and prostitutesNumber of inmatesthousandsNotable inmatesIda Mett Dora Schaul Alexander Grothendieck Michel del Castillo Lenka Reinerova Contents 1 Background 2 Internees 3 Memorial Association 4 Further reading 4 1 Literature and Memoirs 4 2 Non Fiction 5 ReferencesBackground EditIn the late 1930s the French Third Republic increasingly restricted immigration as increasing numbers of political refugees fled ascendant European dictatorships 3 Prime Minister Edouard Daladier of the Radical Party circumvented Parliament to issue a series of decree laws that closed avenues of legal immigration and punished illegal immigration in 1938 and 1939 reversing the nation s tradition of being a country of asylum 4 Daladier s decree of November 12 1938 gave the state the power to intern foreigners in camps As the Spanish Civil War came to a close in the first months of 1939 the armies of soon to be dictator Francisco Franco drove nearly 500 000 refugees north across the border with France 5 The French Third Republic responded by creating a series of internment camps to house and confine the refugees the first of which was Rieucros Historians cite French fears of social revolution and civil war 6 xenophobia and the notion that foreign antifascists fleeing Franco Mussolini and Hitler wanted to draw France into another European war to satisfy their personal lust for revenge 7 as motivating factors for France s hostile reception of refugees during this time As a result the majority of the interned populations in France on the eve of World War II were the first victims and opponents of European fascism allowing for a near seamless takeover by the collaborationist Vichy regime when the Third Republic fell to Nazi Germany in June 1940 Internees EditThe following people were interned in the camp of Rieucros Italian antifascist Ernesto Bonomini was interned and escaped the camp in April 1939 Russian anarchist writer Ida Mett 8 and her son German Communist resister Dora Schaul Journalist Hanka Grothendieck and her son mathematician Alexandre Grothendieck Spanish Republican Isabel del Castillo 9 and her son writer Michel del Castillo Writer and journalist Lenka Reinerova French Communist resister Angelita Bettini 10 Teresa Noce Italian labor leader activist and journalist 11 Memorial Association EditL Association pour le souvenir de Rieucros is a memorial association established on August 12 1992 with the goal to preserve the memory of the suffering of the camp s internees but also to study the causes leading to the creation of such a camp in the recent past 12 Members of the Association include former internees and their surviving family members among others The association engages in educational and commemorative activities including preserving the site of the camp creating informative historical plaques and participating in an annual commemorative ceremony on July 16 the National Day of Remembrance for Victims of Racist and Antisemitic Persecution on the anniversary of the Vel d Hiv Roundup Few traces remain of the camp The barracks and barbed wire have disappeared The most significant vestige of the camp today is a carved rock that depicts a soldier with a gun and the dates 1789 and 1939 marking the 150th anniversary of the French Revolution A nearby rock bears the inscription Gierke Walter a former internee of the camp who may have sculpted the memorial 13 Further reading EditLiterature and Memoirs Edit Michel del Castillo Tanguy 1957 Isabel del Castillo El Incendio Ideas y Recuerdos 1954 Vera T Mirsky The Cup of Astonishment 1944 Lenka Reinerova Promenade au lac des cygnes 2004 French translation Dora Schaul Resistance Erinnerungen deutscher Antifaschisten 1973 Non Fiction Edit Mechtild Gilzmer Fraueninternierungslager in Sudfrankreich Rieucros und Brens 1939 1944 1994 original in German and Camps de femmes Chroniques d internees Rieucros et Brens 1939 1944 2000 translation by Nicole Bary to French Sandrine Peyrac Le camp d internement de Rieucros 1939 1942 l internement de la Republique a l etat francais 2008 Denis Peschanski La France des camps l internement 1938 1946 2002 References Edit The US Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives holds a digitized copy of selections from the Departmental Archives of Lozere that relate to the camp finding aid here http collections ushmm org search catalog irn35835 Gilzmer Mechtild 2000 Camp des femmes Croniques d internees Rieucros et Brens 1939 1944 Paris Autrement Maga Timothy P 1982 Closing the Door The French Government and Refugee Policy 1933 1939 French Historical Studies 12 3 424 442 doi 10 2307 286530 JSTOR 286530 Kirchheimer Otto 1940 Decree Powers and Constitutional Law in France under the Third Republic The American Political Science Review 34 6 1104 1123 doi 10 2307 1948192 JSTOR 1948192 Louis Stein Beyond Death and Exile The Spanish Republicans in France 1939 1955 1979 Stein Beyond Death and Exile page 45 Maud Mandel In the Aftermath of Genocide Armenians and Jews in Twentieth Century France 2003 page 42 Mett Ida 1901 1973 Castillo Isabel del 1954 El incendio Ideas y recuerdos Dans les camps de Petain il etait une jeune femme Angelita L etrange voyage de Teresa Noce a Rieucros Regards croises sur l enfermement et l exclusion Accueil Biographies d hommes internes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rieucros Camp amp oldid 1120969096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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