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Underground media in German-occupied France

The clandestine press of the French Resistance was collectively responsible for printing flyers, broadsheets, newspapers, and even books in secret in France during the German occupation of France in the Second World War. The secret press was used to disseminate the ideas of the French Resistance in cooperation with the Free French, and played an important role in the liberation of France and in the history of French journalism, particularly during the 1944 Freedom of the Press Ordinances [fr].

Issue #1 of Résistance, from the Musée de l'Homme group, 15 December 1940

History edit

 
 
'France under German occupation

Counterpropaganda such as leaflets, broadsheets (such as the first pages of the Valmy newspaper [fr]), brochures, posters, and clandestine newspapers began to appear in France.[when?][1] In September 1941, German police in Paris reported discovering leaflets written in German and co-signed by the Communist Parties of Germany (KPD) and Austria (KPÖ).[2] On 10 July 1942, General Karl Oberg posted a notice in every town hall in the Occupied zone announcing penalties applicable to the families of anyone convicted of disseminating propaganda against the occupying force (writers, typographers, middlemen, distributors), recalling ancient German Sippenhaft-style collective punishment measures. These measures didn't stop the spread of information by the Resistance, and by 1944, 1,200 underground newspaper titles were being published with a total circulation of two million copies, totaling nearly twelve million copies over the course of the war.[3]

The first French underground newspapers emerged in opposition to German and Vichy control over French radio and newspapers.[4] In the German-occupied zone, the first underground titles to emerge were Pantagruel and Libre France, which both began in Paris in October 1940.[5] In Vichy France, the first title to emerge was Liberté in November 1940.[6] Few produced issues for both German and Vichy zones, though Libération was an early exception.[7] In early newspaper issues, individuals often wrote under a number of pseudonyms in the same issue to convey the impression that a team of individuals was working on a newspaper.[8] Initially underground newspapers represented a wide range of political opinions but, by 1944, had generally converged in support of Gaullist Free French in the United Kingdom.[9]

 
Cover of first edition of Le Silence de la Mer by Jean Bruller (1942)

The four major clandestine newspapers during the German occupation were Défense de la France, Résistance, Combat and Libération. Défense de la France was founded by a group of parisian students in the summer of 1941. After the invasion of the Soviet Union, these were joined by a number of communist publications including L'Humanité and Verité.[7] These newspapers were anti-Nazi propaganda, but practiced propaganda themselves by misreporting events, and glorifying and enlarging Allied victories. The reporting in these newspapers was often subjective, as they aimed to capture and shape public opinion rather than accurately represent it. The extent to which underground newspapers actually affected French popular opinion under the occupation is disputed by historians.[10]

Profession-specific newspapers also existed. Le Médecin Français advised doctors to immediately approve known collaborators for Service du travail obligatoire while medically disqualifying everyone else. La Terre advised farmers on how to send food to resistance members. Bulletin des Chemins de Fer encouraged railroad workers to sabotage German transportation. Unter Uns ("Among Us"), published in German for the occupiers, printed stories of German defeats on the eastern front.[11]

A small number of underground presses were also active in printing illegal books and works of literature. The most notable example of this was Le Silence de la mer by Jean Bruller published illegally in Paris in 1942. This marked its publisher, "Les Éditions de Minuit", as an emerging clandestine publisher of Resistance material;[12] they later became a successful commercial literary publisher in post-war France.

The Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) began a project in 2012 to digitise surviving French underground newspapers. By 2015, 1,350 titles had been uploaded on its Gallica platform.[13]

Censorship and repression edit

Censorship in France was the enemy of the underground press during the Second World War. Under the German occupation and the laws of the Vichy regime, freedoms of the French people were suppressed, particularly with the end of freedom of the press. The decree-law of 24 August 1939 authorising seizure of newspapers and their suppression as well as the official establishment of censorship on 27 August led to the disappearance of newspapers which had been denouncing the German occupation.[14] The only media that survived under the occupation were ones that served the propaganda needs of the German occupier and of Vichy.[15]

It also spelled the end of freedom of speech, and any citizen caught reading the foreign press or listening to foreign radio were judged as opponents and enemies of the regime.[citation needed]

The occupying force and the police paid particular attention to counterpropaganda printed matter from the outset. One of the first missions of the police was to discover clandestine newspaper printing locations, and their leaders. The first arrests were therefore those of journalists involved in counterpropaganda such as Jean-Baptiste Lebas, who launched "L'homme libre" (The Free Man) and who died after being deported, or Claude Bourdet, director of the clandestine newspaper Combat arrested in March 1944. Out of 1200 workers of the book Resistance fighters[clarify] 400 were killed (deported, decapitated, shot).[15]

Printing and distribution methods edit

In the face of repression, underground newspapers faced many problems with supplies. Paper, ink and typewriters were scarce, expensive and their sale was meticulously controlled. Printing centres were also few and far between and were used for propaganda newspapers.

The first clandestine newspapers were therefore handwritten with very few copies. However, two processes were useful for clandestine production: the "roneo" Gestetner and the spirit duplicator, which was small in size and therefore easy to transport and hide. It was operated by a small crank handle, and could print between 700 and 800 copies per hour.

Everything was done with the utmost secrecy governments and also of people not involved in the clandestine work. The penalties for being involved in the printing and distribution of a resistance newspaper were very strict.

For the delivery and distribution of newspapers, Resistance members assumed the risk of being arrested and imprisoned. From the beginning, railway workers played an essential role in long-distance transport. The bicycle was also one of the best means of transport for delivering printed material. Other means were also used to distribute newspapers, allowing the anonymity of the distributors to be maintained: slipping the issues into letterboxes, under doors, or in a pocket, or dropping them on a bench or table.

In spite of strong repression and censorship nearly 1200 titles totaling over ten million copies of underground newspapers were printed between 1940 and 1944.[15][page needed]

Radio Londres and the underground press edit

 
General Charles de Gaulle at his desk in London during the War

After the Fall of France in 1940, the BBC opened its studio to the first members of the Resistance who fled Occupied France. Radio Londres was born and would become the daily rendezvous of the French people for four years. It opened its transmission with, "Ici Londres. Les Français parlent aux Français..." ("This is London. The French speaking to the French..."), now a very famous quote in France. It was the voice of Free French Forces under Charles de Gaulle, who, on 18 June 1940, made his famous Appeal of 18 June, inviting his compatriots to resist the occupation, and rise up against it.

The press was constrained on French territory to considerable supply difficulties and strong political repression. Radio, which broadcast mainly from abroad, was not subject to the same forms of repression. Radio Londres, broadcast by the French section of the BBC[16] seemed better placed to make the voice of the French Resistance heard and to have a psychological influence on the French. Its broadcasts could be listened to both throughout the country and within the homes themselves, but in 1940 there were only five million receivers and the transistor hadn't yet been invented. Moreover, the broadcasts only provided a view of events from the outside, and had limited knowledge of what was happening within French territory.

Radio London and the clandestine newspapers thus had complementary functions in their common objective of bringing as many French people as possible to the Resistance. The radio was able to reach the entirety of the French population, while the press had the mission of fighting directly on the home front until it was able to spread more and more to the territory as a whole.[15][page needed]

Calling for resistance edit

The content of clandestine newspapers focused exclusively on the motivations and nature of the Resistance struggle, and why it was necessary.

The duty to act is clearly stated in the first issue of Libération of July 1941 which stated that the newspaper per se is an action and that the situation can only be changed "by action and through action".[a] Combat followed it by giving in January 1942 "guidelines for action".[17]

 
Plaque in Quimper commemorating a January 1944 act of sabotage against the STO office, destroying 44,000 files.

There was only one cause common to all underground newspapers: to appeal to as many French people as possible to join the fight against the occupier, to "chase away the invader"[b] as Libération wrote in August 1941, with the aim of liberating French territory. The first form of action targeted by the underground press was the call to read and circulate copies of the clandestine press. It also encouraged the reader to become a distributor. It was a form of "combat through words", as Combat wrote in December 1941. The situation at the time only allowed for resistance via verbal struggle. "We will take part in the crushing of Germany, even at the risk of our own lives,"[c] wrote the August 1941 issue of Les Petites Ailes. [fr][17]

The clandestine press worked to counter the ideas of the Vichy regime and Nazis by taking up the key themes of the official propaganda. By 1943, the watchwords of the counterpropaganda struggle taken up by all of the underground press, were opposing the Service du travail obligatoire, the Nazi-imposed obligatory work program, and calling for demonstrations, strikes and sabotage of French-made goods destined for Germany.[17]

Top-circulation titles edit

 
 
Issue № 46 of Combat of 1 August 1943

Combat edit

The Petites Ailes ("Little Wings") appeared in the Forbidden Zone in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais department in northern France. In the Occupied and Free zones, it becamee known as Les Petites Ailes de France. In August 1941, its title changed: in the northern, Occupied zone, to Résistance; in the southern zone, to Vérités (Truth). The group in the north was destroyed.[clarification needed] In the south, during the merger of the National Liberation Movement (1940-41) [fr] (MLN) with the Liberty [fr] Resistance group, Vérités became Combat, a new newspaper common to all three zones; its title was adopted by the MLN group, thenceforth known as Combat,[18] whose first issue came out in December 1941[19] under the influence of Bertie Albrecht and Henri Frenay. Production of Combat was directed by André Bollier. Thanks to the structures put in place, circulation reached 1000 copies in 1943, and attained 5,000 with issue number 50[20] of 1 November 1943.[21][22] and 30,000 in December 1943.

After the Liberation, Combat was led by Albert Ollivier, Jean Bloch-Michel [fr], Georges Altschuler [fr] and especially Pascal Pia, who dragged his friend Albert Camus there in the fall of 1943.[23] Jean-Paul Sartre, André Malraux, Paul Gordeaux [fr] and Emmanuel Mounier also contributed, and later Raymond Aron and Pierre Herbart.

Défense de la France edit

A few Parisian students decided to found a clandestine newspaper to denounce the occupation of France. Benefiting from the support of industrialists and printers, the young Resistance fighters managed to produce an increasingly professional newspaper which ended up having the highest circulation of any underground paper as of January 1944.

The first issues were printed on a Rotaprint offset press hidden in the cellar of the Sorbonne, to which Hélène Viannay held the key as a volunteer fire fighter, with the following sentence from Blaise Pascal: "I only believe stories whose witnesses would have their throats cut".[d]

Initially focused on non-violent action, the Resistance segued into armed operations in 1944. Despite setbacks dealt by the German and French police, Défense de la France managed to print both its newspaper and those of other movements until the Liberation.

Among the printers were Pierre Virol [fr], who was arrested in 1944, deported, and died in Lager Ellrich, a subcamp of Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp on 23 January 1945, and his son-in-law Robert[clarification needed], who died 27 December 1944 in the same subcamp. After Liberation, from 8 August on, the paper was printed in Rennes, on the presses of the newspaper Ouest-France, presenting itself as the "evening daily of the National Liberation Movement [fr]".

Distributed by the networks Combat and Témoignage chrétien in Grenoble, Clermont-Ferrand, Lyon and Bretagne, Défense de la France became the underground paper with the highest circulation, with 450,000 copies per day as of January 1944.[25]

In March 1944, after multiple moves, the newspaper was housed in a three-story industrial building on rue Jean-Dolent, behind La Santé Prison in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, with "Big Margot", a six-ton "double-jesus" machine,[26] a linotype, a paper cutter, and a supply of paper, gasoline, food, water and two tons of coal for the foundry.[citation needed]

Le Franc-Tireur edit

 
 
Commemoration of the 5 May 1942 meeting between the Franc-Tireurs André and Alice Vansteenberghe-Joly with Jean Moulin, Henri Frenay, Jean-Pierre Lévy [fr] and others.

Franc-Tireur was a movement of the French Resistance founded in Lyon in November 1940 under the name France Liberté,[27] and renamed Franc-Tireur in December 1941.

Le Franc-Tireur is also the name of the movement's underground newspaper, which printed thirty-seven issues between December 1941 and August 1944.[28][e] It became one of the chief newspapers of the Resistance, and continued to be published until 1957 after being renamed "Franc-Tireur" at Liberation, with the motto: "In the vanguard of the Republic." From 1957 to 1959, it had the title Paris Journal and then Paris Jour from 1959 to 1972.

 
Le Mur d'Auvergne, a local paper of the MUR (February. 1944)

The leader of the movement was Jean-Pierre Lévy [fr]. Under the aegis of Jean Moulin, the movement merged with Libération-sud and Combat to create the new Mouvements Unis de la Résistance (MUR).

Franc-Tireur is a movement in the southern zone that has the most roots in Lyon. Founded in 1941 by a group of men from various backgrounds, it is a movement of personalities with the same political sensitivity, opposition to the armistice and, from the outset, to the Marshal Pétain himself.[29]

Birth of the movement edit

The initiators of the movement met at home or during card games at the Café Moulin joli. The first members were Antoine Avinin, member of the Young Republic League political party and left-wing Catholic, Auguste Pinton [fr], former city councillor, Élie Péju [fr], and Jean-Jacques Soudeille [fr], former communists turned radicals.[30]

They and a few others got together at the end of November 1940 and founded a movement they called "France-Liberté" whose mission was to fight against government propaganda and to mobilize against defeat and the authoritarian order which was taking hold. The group began by writing leaflets against the Nazis and Pétain, which were limited to small numbers of hand-typed copies due to lack of funds.[30]

Birth of the paper edit

The group had its first wave of success with the arrival of Jean-Pierre Lévy, an Alsatian refugee who brought a ronéo in the spring of 1941 and launched the idea of expanding its influence by publishing a real newspaper.[30]

With the support of the printer Henri Chevalier [fr], 6000 copies of the first issue were published in December 1941. They were printed on four pages of 21 x 27.5 cm (8 1/2 x 11 inch) format. The title "Franc-Tireur" is an allusion to the groups of volunteers who formed outside the normal military framework to defend their country and the Republic in the Franco-Prussian War. The tone of articles was humorous (the newspaper's ironic subtitle was, "monthly as far as possible, and by the grace of the Marshal's Police".[31][f] then "monthly in spite of the Gestapo and the Vichy police"[32][g] and took an offensive tone against the Marshal and the Germans. The main themes were opposition to the new order and the occupying Germans, denunciation of their misdeeds, and the call to resistance by all people of good will. Issue number one ended with the words, "There is only one task: to resist, to organize.".[30][h]

L'Humanité edit

On 27 August 1939, the Édouard Daladier government banned publication of L'Humanité after it approved the German-Soviet Pact.

L'Humanité then appeared clandestinely for five years (383 issues of 200,000 copies)[33] and refrained from attacking the Germans until August 1940. Many of its journalists and manufacturing staff perished in the struggle against the Nazi occupier, such as Gabriel Péri (responsible for an international column, shot on 15 December 1941 at the Fort Mont-Valérien, and Lucien Sampaix. The newspaper reappeared openly once more on 21 August 1944, during the Liberation of Paris.

The clandestine issue of 20 May 1941 contained an appeal of the French Communist Party (PCF) concerning the creation of the National Front for the Struggle for the Liberation and Independence of France:

The CP is directed to all those who think French and want to be act their Frenchness... In this National Front for Independence there is room for all French people except for the capitalist dogs and traitors in the service of the invader, so that France may be France and not become a Nazi colony national unity must be achieved... against the invaders and traitors, against the Vichy government which obeys the orders of the German occupiers.

National Front publications edit

 
Page 1 the FN paper Résistance of 25 June 1943 from the Seine-Inférieure department.

The National Front published numerous national and local clandestine newspapers and flyers.[34] From the spring of 1943 to the Liberation, 79 publications were published.[35] In 1944-1945 they published, according to an internal French Communist Party (PCF) source, "Seventeen dailies, one million sales. three weeklies: La Marseillaise (Île-de-France), France d'abord, Action. Five literary weeklies, 35 periodicals (weeklies) in the provinces.".[36]

Among them, were:

Review of French writers assembled in the Comité national des écrivains [fr]. Founded in October 1941 by Jacques Decour and Jean Paulhan, 25 issues were published. Les Lettres françaises appeared after Liberation, until 1972.
  • L’Université libre [fr] (104 issues, from November 1940 o October 1944), headed by Georges Politzer, Jacques Solomon (son-in-law of Paul Langevin) and Jacques Decour ;
  • Front National, Parisian newspaper, a daily starting in August 1944, directed by Jacques Debû-Bridel [fr];
  • Le Patriote du Sud-Ouest, organ of the National Front in Toulouse; a daily at Liberation,[37] its director was then André Wurmser [fr] and was among its young coworkers Pierre Gamarra;[38]

They also published books and brochures, such as a book about the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre.[39]

Libération edit

The underground paper Libération was the voice of the Resistance movement Libération-Sud. It was launched in July 1941 by Raymond Aubrac and Emmanuel d'Astier de La Vigerie. It became one of the most important and widely distributed of all Resistance newspapers. Libération reappeared openly in regular publication at the Liberation of France in August 1944.

The first published edition of Libération, dated July 1941, resulted in the distribution of over 10,000 copies. In autumn 1942, Jules Meurillon was named in charge of the propaganda and distribution service of the organization and successfully increased the annual circulation of Libération to over 200,000 copies by August 1944.[40]

This paper published by Resistance movement Libération-Sud, is the same paper that was reestablished in 1973 by Jean-Paul Sartre and Serge July.[41]

Témoignage chrétien edit

 
Pierre Chaillet (1900–1972)

On 16 November 1941 in Lyon, Jesuit priest Father Pierre Chaillet secretly published the first Cahier du Témoignage chrétien ("Christian Testimony Notes"). Entitled, "France, beware of losing your soul",[i] in the form of a small pamphlet (hence the name). It contained a vibrant appeal to oppose Nazism in the name of Christian values. It was entirely written by Father Gaston Fessard. "Christian Testimony" was originally due to be called "Catholic Testimony", but due to ecumenism and following the participation of Protestants in the secret cell initially made up of Jesuits theologians from the Theologate of Fourvière (Lyon), the adjective "Catholic" was changed to "Christian". Parallel to the Cahiers du Témoignage Chrétien, which dealt with a single topic in each issue, there was also the Courrier Français du Témoignage Chrétien (French Christian Testimony Mail) from May 1943, appeared in a print run of 100,000 rising to 200,000 copies.

 
Issue no. 4, October 1943.

The editorial team was headed by Father Pierre Chaillet, and included several Jesuits, especially from the Jesuit theologate of Fourvière in Lyon, including Gaston Fessard and Henri de Lubac, secular priests including Pierre Bockel [fr] and Alexandre Glasberg [fr], who were joined by lay persons André Mandouze, Joseph Hours, Robert d'Harcourt.[42] It was printed secretly by a printer from Lyon, Eugène Pons, who ended up deported, and died.

A unique feature of Témoignage Chrétien compared to other Resistance newspapers, was its claim to a spiritual resistance [fr]. In fact, the basis for Témoignage Chrétien's opposition to Nazism is the Gospel and Christian ideals. The subtitle of the Témoignage Chrétien is Linking the Front of spiritual resistance against Hitlerism.[j] Thirteen issues of Courrier du Témoignage Chrétien and fourteen of "Cahiers" were distributed before the liberation.

La Vie ouvrière edit

 
La Vie ouvrière of 28 December 1940

Prohibited from publication in 1939, La Vie ouvrière[43] reappeared as an underground paper in February 1940. In the early days of the occupation, Benoît Frachon, André Tollet, Eugène Hénaff, and a few other union activists from the former United General Confederation of Labor, excluded from the General Confederation of Labor in September 1939, who had escaped the search by the French police, relaunched the newspaper. Two hundred twenty-three issues were published throughout the occupation, focusing on daily life: cost of living, food shortages, supply problems, low salaries, and so on. It called for struggle, union reunification of unions, and fought against internal division. It denounced employers who had largely sunk into collaboration with the occupiers, and reported regularly about the struggles taking place in business.[citation needed]

Other titles edit

 
Nord Éclair of 5 September 1944 announcing the liberation of Lille

Others include Arc [fr], which published 20 issues of two- to three hundred copies, the first eight of which were under the name Libre France. It stopped publishing early in 1941.[citation needed]. The underground paper L'Espoir [fr] was published in Guérande, in the northwestern part of France, and was published from 13 August 1944 to 10 May 1945, after the local paper, the Presqu'île guérandaise, was forbidden to publish by the German military authorities in March 1944. In issue number one, on 13 August, they ran an editorial about their goals:[44]

This little open flyer shouldn't be called "Hope", but rather, "Liaison agent". Certainly, it brings hope that we will soon be welcoming our liberators, hope that this war, forced upon us by the Germans, will end as soon as possible, but also, it acts as a connection among people, among families, all friends dreaming the same dream. It's the intermediary that will bring you the voice broadcast by Radio London."[k]

— "Éditorial", La Presqu'île guérandaise (13 August 1944)

On 7 May 1945, they published a "special victory edition", and the next day, they ran a story about the joy in Guérande after they learned of the liberation the day before at 4:30 pm.[45] The last issue came out 10 May 1945 after the electricity came back on, once again allowing the populace to hear the news live from Radio London, and no longer needing to read a printed account of what the radio had broadcast the day before.[45]

Fiction publishing edit

A small number of underground presses were also active in printing illegal books and works of literature. The most notable example of this was Le Silence de la mer by Jean Bruller published illegally in Paris in 1942. Its publisher, "Les Éditions de Minuit", became a successful commercial literary publisher in post-war France.

See also edit

See also the French category Journal clandestin de la Résistance française

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ In French: par l’action et dans l’action. —from the first issue of Libération in July 1941.
  2. ^ French: "Chasser l’envahisseur" —Libération, August 1941.
  3. ^ French: "Nous participerons à l’écrasement de l’Allemagne fut-ce au péril de nos vies" —August 1941 issue of Les Petites Ailes.
  4. ^ I only believe...: "Je ne crois que les histoires dont les témoins se feraient égorger."[24]
  5. ^ Originally, with a masthead motto of "Organ of the National Liberation Movement [fr], later: "Organ of the Mouvements Unis de la Résistance."
  6. ^ It's ironic subtitle: "mensuel dans la mesure du possible et par la grâce de la police du Maréchal."
  7. ^ "monthly in spite of...: "mensuel malgré la Gestapo et la police de Vichy"
  8. ^ One task: "Une seule tâche s'impose : résister, organiser."
  9. ^ "France prends garde de perdre ton âme"
  10. ^ "Lien du Front de résistance spirituelle contre l'Hitlérisme."
  11. ^ From the editorial in the Presqu'île guérandaise: Ce n'est pas l'espoir que ce petit pli ouvert devrait se nommer, mais Agent de liaison. Certes, il porte l'espoir que bientôt nous accueillerons nos libérateurs, espoir que cette guerre, imposée par les Allemands, va finir au plus tôt, mais aussi, agent de liaison entre les hommes, les familles, les amis rêvant d'un même idéal. C'est l'agent de liaison qui vous apporte la voix émise par radio Londres.
Footnotes
  1. ^ Frinter 2013.
  2. ^ Denis 2018.
  3. ^ Thibault 2010.
  4. ^ Gould 2015, pp. 31–2.
  5. ^ Jackson 2001, p. 403.
  6. ^ Gould 2015, p. 32.
  7. ^ a b Stone 1996, p. 55.
  8. ^ Jackson 2001, p. 408.
  9. ^ Gould 2015, p. 33.
  10. ^ Gould 2015, pp. 40–1.
  11. ^ Breuer 2000, p. 131–134.
  12. ^ Taoua, Phyllis (2002). Forms of Protest: Anti-colonialism and Avant-gardes in Africa, the Caribbean, and France. Studies in African literature. Portsmouth, NH: ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-325-07090-2. OCLC 938978499. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  13. ^ Gallica 2019.
  14. ^ LdH-MP 2015.
  15. ^ a b c d Krivopissko 1986.
  16. ^ Wieviorka 1996, p. 125–136.
  17. ^ a b c Gabert 2000, p. 75-82.
  18. ^ Ruby 1982, p. 11.
  19. ^ Combat-1 1941.
  20. ^ Ruby 1982, p. 15.
  21. ^ Combat-50 1943.
  22. ^ Ruby 1981, p. 99.
  23. ^ Courtine-Denamy 1999, p. 81.
  24. ^ Pascal 2011.
  25. ^ Vincenot 2009.
  26. ^ Monet 1872, p. 312.
  27. ^ von Bueltzingsloewen 2016, p. 274.
  28. ^ Christofferson 2006, p. 148.
  29. ^ CHRD & Doré-Rivé 2012, p. 78, Laurent Douzou.
  30. ^ a b c d CHRD & Doré-Rivé 2012, p. 78.
  31. ^ Michel 1980, p. 64.
  32. ^ MLN 1944.
  33. ^ Marcot 2006, p. 729.
  34. ^ Claude Bellanger, Presse clandestine 1940-1944, col. « kiosque », Armand Colin, 1961, p. 214-215
  35. ^ Philippe Buton, article " Front national ", pp. 651-653, in François Broche, Georges Caïtucoli and Jean-François Muracciole, Dictionnaire de la France libre, Robert Laffont, 2010.
  36. ^ Marcel Cachin, Carnets, p. 830, volume 4 (1935-1947), published under the direction of Denis Peschanski, CNRS éditions, Paris, 1997
  37. ^ Henri Lerner, « La presse toulousaine de la Libération au 1er départ du général de Gaulle, août 1944-janvier 1946 », Annales du Midi.
  38. ^ Notice « Pierre Gamarra », par Bernard Épin, Le Maitron en ligne
  39. ^ Louis, René (1945). Le Massacre d'Oradour-sur-Glane par les hordes hitlériennes [Massacre at Oradour-sur-Glane by the Hitlerian Hordes]. Front national. OCLC 461446712.
  40. ^ Girac-Marinier, Carine; Nimmo, Claude; Pelpel-Moulian, Julie, eds. (2005). "Libération-Sud". Archive Larousse : Dictionnaire de l'Histoire de France. Larousse. 709. Retrieved 21 June 2010.
  41. ^ Santi, Pascale (13 June 2006). ""Libération" : Edouard de Rothschild veut le départ de Serge July" ["Libération": Edouard de Rothschild wants Serge July to leave]. Le Monde (in French). Paris. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  42. ^ Duquesne 1986, p. 137.
  43. ^ Rémond & Bourdin 1978, p. 184–185.
  44. ^ Yviquel 2008, p. 89.
  45. ^ a b Yviquel 2008, p. 96.
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  • Gabert, Michèle (2000). Entrés en résistance (in French). Grenoble: presse universitaire de Grenoble. pp. 75–82.
  • "Bir-Hakeim". Gallica. Biblioteque Nationale de France.
  • "La presse clandestine de la Seconde Guerre mondiale". Le Blog Gallica. Bibliothèque nationale de France. 28 May 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  • Gould, Sophie (2015). "Mightier than the Sword? Liberation and the Clandestine Press in France, 1940–44" (PDF). Yale University.
  • infoNormandie (10 December 2013). "Décès de Marie-Thérèse Fainstein : l'hommage de Didier Marie à "une héroïne de la Résistance"" [Death of Marie-Thérèse Fainstein: Didier Marie's homage to 'a heroine of the Resistance']. infoNormandie (in French).
  • "Madame Fainstein et la ville de Dieppe" [Madame Fainstein and the City of Dieppe]. Je me souviens (in French). 2013.
  • Krivopissko, G.; Willard, G. (1986). (PDF). Musée de la Résistance de Châteaubriant (pdf) (in French). Ivry. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 December 2018.
  • "La liberté de la presse en France depuis la Révolution" [Freedom of the Press in France since the Revolution]. Ligue des Droits de l'Homme de Midi Pyrénées (in French). LDH Midi Pyrénées. 2015.
  • Marcot, François; Leroux, Bruno; Levisse-Touzé, Christine (2006). Dictionnaire historique de la Résistance : Résistance intérieure et France libre [Historical Dictionary of the Resistance]. Bouquins (in French). Paris: R. Laffont. ISBN 9782221099971. OCLC 421137830.
  • Michel, Henri (1980). Histoire de la Résistance en France [History of the Resistance in France]. Que sais-je? #429. PUF. ISBN 978-2130-36520-4. OCLC 924704972.
  • Miller, Russell (1979). The Resistance. Time-Life Books. ISBN 978-0-8094-2522-8. Retrieved 17 February 2021. In France the most popular symbol of resistance was the doublebarred cross of Lorraine , adopted by the London - based leader of the Free French , General Charles de Gaulle.
  • Monet, Adolphe Lucien (1872). Le conducteur de machines typographiques guide pratique par A.-L. Monet prote des machines à l'imprimerie J. Claye [Practical guide to typographical machines by A.-L. Monet workshop manager of the J. Claye printing press]. Paris: Jules Claye. OCLC 563914755.
  • Mouvement de libération nationale (1944). "Le Franc-tireur : mensuel dans la mesure du possible et par la grâce de la police du Maréchal". BNF Gallica : exemplaires du journal pour l'annéee 1944 (in French).
  • Kidder, David S.; Oppenheim, Noah D. (3 October 2006). The Intellectual Devotional: Revive Your Mind, Complete Your Education, and Roam Confidently with the Cultured Class. Rodale Books. ISBN 978-1-59486-513-8. During World War II , the underground fighters of the French Resistance adopted the cross of Lorraine
  • Pascal, Blaise (2011) [1st pub. 1669]. D. Descotes; G. Proust (eds.). "Pensées de Blaise Pascal". Pensées de Pascal (in French).


  • Rémond, René; Bourdin, Janine (1978). La France et les Français en 1938-1939 [France and the French in 1938-1939]. Paris: Presses de la Fondation nationale des sciences politiques. ISBN 978-2-7246-0411-5. OCLC 469755034.
  • Ruby, Marcel (1981). La contre-Résistance à Lyon :1940-1944. Les Hommes et les lettres. Histoire (in French). Lyon: Éditions L'Hermès. ISBN 2-85934-091-2..
  • Ruby, Marcel (1982). Les Mouvements unis de Résistance. Cahiers d'Histoire de la Guerre, 9 (in French). Lyon: Éditions L'Hermès. ISBN 2-85934-104-8..
  • Stone, Harry (1996). Writing in the Shadow: Resistance Publications in Occupied Europe (1st ed.). London: Cass. ISBN 0-7146-3424-7.
  • Thibault, Laurence (2010). Imprimeurs et éditeurs dans la Résistance [Printers and publishers in the Resistance]. Collection Cahiers de la Résistance (in French). AERI-La documentation Française.
  • Time Inc (14 August 1944). LIFE. Time Inc. ISSN 0024-3019. When de Gaulle in London in 1940 lighted the flame of French resistance, he had had no political experience. In this there were advantages as well as disadvantages. He chose as the symbol of his movement the Cross of Lorraine.
  • Vincenot, Alain (7 January 2009). [Issue #20,000 - France Soir came from a secret newspaper during the Occupation]. France Soir (in French). Archived from the original on 21 September 2009.
  • von Bueltzingsloewen, Isabelle; Douzou, Laurent; Durand, Jean-Dominique; Joly, Hervé; Solchany, Jean (2016). Lyon dans la Seconde guerre mondiale villes et métropoles à l'épreuve du conflit [Lyon in the Second World War - Cities and Metropolises facing the Test of Conflict]. Collection Histoire, 2016 #4. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes. ISBN 978-2-7535-4359-1. OCLC 980931068.
  • [One of the first newspapers of the Resistance was 'Free Poitou']. vrid-memorial. Presse de la Résistance dans le département de la Vienne. Archived from the original on 8 June 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2020. The first issue was in circulation by 11 November 1940. Le premier exemplaire circula dès le 11 novembre 1940.


  • Wieviorka, Olivier (1996). "La presse clandestine". Mélanges de l'école française de Rome. 108 (1): 125–136. doi:10.3406/mefr.1996.4426.
  • Yviquel, Louis; Bourse, Aurélia; Olivaux, André; Gallicé, Alain (2008). "L'Espoir : journal clandestin publié à Guérande du 13 août 1944 au 10 mai 1945" [L'Espoir: underground newspaper published in Guérande from 13 August 1944 to 10 May 1945]. Les cahiers du pays de Guérande [Notes from the Guérande] (in French) (47). Société des Amis de Guérande.

Further reading edit

  • "La presse clandestine de 1940 à 1945" [The Clandestine Press from 1940 to 1945] (PDF). www.tracesdhistoire.fr..

External links edit

  • the Collection of the Institute for the History of Present Times [fr] (IHTP) of the French National Centre for Scientific Research.
  • the student press can be accessed at the website of the Conservatory of Student Memories, notably almost the entire run of the resistance paper [The Free University]. Archived from the original on 25 November 2006..
  • "Principaux titres de presse clandestine de la Résistance" [Principal Titles of the Clandestine Press of the Resistance]. Gallica.

underground, media, german, occupied, france, clandestine, press, french, resistance, collectively, responsible, printing, flyers, broadsheets, newspapers, even, books, secret, france, during, german, occupation, france, second, world, secret, press, used, dis. The clandestine press of the French Resistance was collectively responsible for printing flyers broadsheets newspapers and even books in secret in France during the German occupation of France in the Second World War The secret press was used to disseminate the ideas of the French Resistance in cooperation with the Free French and played an important role in the liberation of France and in the history of French journalism particularly during the 1944 Freedom of the Press Ordinances fr Issue 1 of Resistance from the Musee de l Homme group 15 December 1940 Contents 1 History 1 1 Censorship and repression 1 2 Printing and distribution methods 1 3 Radio Londres and the underground press 1 4 Calling for resistance 2 Top circulation titles 2 1 Combat 2 2 Defense de la France 2 3 Le Franc Tireur 2 3 1 Birth of the movement 2 3 2 Birth of the paper 2 4 L Humanite 2 5 National Front publications 2 6 Liberation 2 7 Temoignage chretien 2 8 La Vie ouvriere 3 Other titles 4 Fiction publishing 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editFurther information Vichy France nbsp nbsp France under German occupation Counterpropaganda such as leaflets broadsheets such as the first pages of the Valmy newspaper fr brochures posters and clandestine newspapers began to appear in France when 1 In September 1941 German police in Paris reported discovering leaflets written in German and co signed by the Communist Parties of Germany KPD and Austria KPO 2 On 10 July 1942 General Karl Oberg posted a notice in every town hall in the Occupied zone announcing penalties applicable to the families of anyone convicted of disseminating propaganda against the occupying force writers typographers middlemen distributors recalling ancient German Sippenhaft style collective punishment measures These measures didn t stop the spread of information by the Resistance and by 1944 1 200 underground newspaper titles were being published with a total circulation of two million copies totaling nearly twelve million copies over the course of the war 3 The first French underground newspapers emerged in opposition to German and Vichy control over French radio and newspapers 4 In the German occupied zone the first underground titles to emerge were Pantagruel and Libre France which both began in Paris in October 1940 5 In Vichy France the first title to emerge was Liberte in November 1940 6 Few produced issues for both German and Vichy zones though Liberation was an early exception 7 In early newspaper issues individuals often wrote under a number of pseudonyms in the same issue to convey the impression that a team of individuals was working on a newspaper 8 Initially underground newspapers represented a wide range of political opinions but by 1944 had generally converged in support of Gaullist Free French in the United Kingdom 9 nbsp Cover of first edition of Le Silence de la Mer by Jean Bruller 1942 The four major clandestine newspapers during the German occupation were Defense de la France Resistance Combat and Liberation Defense de la France was founded by a group of parisian students in the summer of 1941 After the invasion of the Soviet Union these were joined by a number of communist publications including L Humanite and Verite 7 These newspapers were anti Nazi propaganda but practiced propaganda themselves by misreporting events and glorifying and enlarging Allied victories The reporting in these newspapers was often subjective as they aimed to capture and shape public opinion rather than accurately represent it The extent to which underground newspapers actually affected French popular opinion under the occupation is disputed by historians 10 Profession specific newspapers also existed Le Medecin Francais advised doctors to immediately approve known collaborators for Service du travail obligatoire while medically disqualifying everyone else La Terre advised farmers on how to send food to resistance members Bulletin des Chemins de Fer encouraged railroad workers to sabotage German transportation Unter Uns Among Us published in German for the occupiers printed stories of German defeats on the eastern front 11 A small number of underground presses were also active in printing illegal books and works of literature The most notable example of this was Le Silence de la mer by Jean Bruller published illegally in Paris in 1942 This marked its publisher Les Editions de Minuit as an emerging clandestine publisher of Resistance material 12 they later became a successful commercial literary publisher in post war France The Bibliotheque nationale de France BnF began a project in 2012 to digitise surviving French underground newspapers By 2015 1 350 titles had been uploaded on its Gallica platform 13 Censorship and repression edit Censorship in France was the enemy of the underground press during the Second World War Under the German occupation and the laws of the Vichy regime freedoms of the French people were suppressed particularly with the end of freedom of the press The decree law of 24 August 1939 authorising seizure of newspapers and their suppression as well as the official establishment of censorship on 27 August led to the disappearance of newspapers which had been denouncing the German occupation 14 The only media that survived under the occupation were ones that served the propaganda needs of the German occupier and of Vichy 15 It also spelled the end of freedom of speech and any citizen caught reading the foreign press or listening to foreign radio were judged as opponents and enemies of the regime citation needed The occupying force and the police paid particular attention to counterpropaganda printed matter from the outset One of the first missions of the police was to discover clandestine newspaper printing locations and their leaders The first arrests were therefore those of journalists involved in counterpropaganda such as Jean Baptiste Lebas who launched L homme libre The Free Man and who died after being deported or Claude Bourdet director of the clandestine newspaper Combat arrested in March 1944 Out of 1200 workers of the book Resistance fighters clarify 400 were killed deported decapitated shot 15 Printing and distribution methods edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message In the face of repression underground newspapers faced many problems with supplies Paper ink and typewriters were scarce expensive and their sale was meticulously controlled Printing centres were also few and far between and were used for propaganda newspapers The first clandestine newspapers were therefore handwritten with very few copies However two processes were useful for clandestine production the roneo Gestetner and the spirit duplicator which was small in size and therefore easy to transport and hide It was operated by a small crank handle and could print between 700 and 800 copies per hour Everything was done with the utmost secrecy governments and also of people not involved in the clandestine work The penalties for being involved in the printing and distribution of a resistance newspaper were very strict For the delivery and distribution of newspapers Resistance members assumed the risk of being arrested and imprisoned From the beginning railway workers played an essential role in long distance transport The bicycle was also one of the best means of transport for delivering printed material Other means were also used to distribute newspapers allowing the anonymity of the distributors to be maintained slipping the issues into letterboxes under doors or in a pocket or dropping them on a bench or table In spite of strong repression and censorship nearly 1200 titles totaling over ten million copies of underground newspapers were printed between 1940 and 1944 15 page needed Radio Londres and the underground press edit Main article Radio Londres nbsp General Charles de Gaulle at his desk in London during the War After the Fall of France in 1940 the BBC opened its studio to the first members of the Resistance who fled Occupied France Radio Londres was born and would become the daily rendezvous of the French people for four years It opened its transmission with Ici Londres Les Francais parlent aux Francais This is London The French speaking to the French now a very famous quote in France It was the voice of Free French Forces under Charles de Gaulle who on 18 June 1940 made his famous Appeal of 18 June inviting his compatriots to resist the occupation and rise up against it The press was constrained on French territory to considerable supply difficulties and strong political repression Radio which broadcast mainly from abroad was not subject to the same forms of repression Radio Londres broadcast by the French section of the BBC 16 seemed better placed to make the voice of the French Resistance heard and to have a psychological influence on the French Its broadcasts could be listened to both throughout the country and within the homes themselves but in 1940 there were only five million receivers and the transistor hadn t yet been invented Moreover the broadcasts only provided a view of events from the outside and had limited knowledge of what was happening within French territory Radio London and the clandestine newspapers thus had complementary functions in their common objective of bringing as many French people as possible to the Resistance The radio was able to reach the entirety of the French population while the press had the mission of fighting directly on the home front until it was able to spread more and more to the territory as a whole 15 page needed Calling for resistance edit The content of clandestine newspapers focused exclusively on the motivations and nature of the Resistance struggle and why it was necessary The duty to act is clearly stated in the first issue of Liberation of July 1941 which stated that the newspaper per se is an action and that the situation can only be changed by action and through action a Combat followed it by giving in January 1942 guidelines for action 17 nbsp Plaque in Quimper commemorating a January 1944 act of sabotage against the STO office destroying 44 000 files There was only one cause common to all underground newspapers to appeal to as many French people as possible to join the fight against the occupier to chase away the invader b as Liberation wrote in August 1941 with the aim of liberating French territory The first form of action targeted by the underground press was the call to read and circulate copies of the clandestine press It also encouraged the reader to become a distributor It was a form of combat through words as Combat wrote in December 1941 The situation at the time only allowed for resistance via verbal struggle We will take part in the crushing of Germany even at the risk of our own lives c wrote the August 1941 issue of Les Petites Ailes fr 17 The clandestine press worked to counter the ideas of the Vichy regime and Nazis by taking up the key themes of the official propaganda By 1943 the watchwords of the counterpropaganda struggle taken up by all of the underground press were opposing the Service du travail obligatoire the Nazi imposed obligatory work program and calling for demonstrations strikes and sabotage of French made goods destined for Germany 17 Top circulation titles edit nbsp nbsp Issue 46 of Combat of 1 August 1943 Combat edit Main article Combat French Resistance The secret press The Petites Ailes Little Wings appeared in the Forbidden Zone in the Nord Pas de Calais department in northern France In the Occupied and Free zones it becamee known as Les Petites Ailes de France In August 1941 its title changed in the northern Occupied zone to Resistance in the southern zone to Verites Truth The group in the north was destroyed clarification needed In the south during the merger of the National Liberation Movement 1940 41 fr MLN with the Liberty fr Resistance group Verites became Combat a new newspaper common to all three zones its title was adopted by the MLN group thenceforth known as Combat 18 whose first issue came out in December 1941 19 under the influence of Bertie Albrecht and Henri Frenay Production of Combat was directed by Andre Bollier Thanks to the structures put in place circulation reached 1000 copies in 1943 and attained 5 000 with issue number 50 20 of 1 November 1943 21 22 and 30 000 in December 1943 After the Liberation Combat was led by Albert Ollivier Jean Bloch Michel fr Georges Altschuler fr and especially Pascal Pia who dragged his friend Albert Camus there in the fall of 1943 23 Jean Paul Sartre Andre Malraux Paul Gordeaux fr and Emmanuel Mounier also contributed and later Raymond Aron and Pierre Herbart Defense de la France edit Main article Defense de la France A few Parisian students decided to found a clandestine newspaper to denounce the occupation of France Benefiting from the support of industrialists and printers the young Resistance fighters managed to produce an increasingly professional newspaper which ended up having the highest circulation of any underground paper as of January 1944 The first issues were printed on a Rotaprint offset press hidden in the cellar of the Sorbonne to which Helene Viannay held the key as a volunteer fire fighter with the following sentence from Blaise Pascal I only believe stories whose witnesses would have their throats cut d Initially focused on non violent action the Resistance segued into armed operations in 1944 Despite setbacks dealt by the German and French police Defense de la France managed to print both its newspaper and those of other movements until the Liberation Among the printers were Pierre Virol fr who was arrested in 1944 deported and died in Lager Ellrich a subcamp of Mittelbau Dora concentration camp on 23 January 1945 and his son in law Robert clarification needed who died 27 December 1944 in the same subcamp After Liberation from 8 August on the paper was printed in Rennes on the presses of the newspaper Ouest France presenting itself as the evening daily of the National Liberation Movement fr Distributed by the networks Combat and Temoignage chretien in Grenoble Clermont Ferrand Lyon and Bretagne Defense de la France became the underground paper with the highest circulation with 450 000 copies per day as of January 1944 25 In March 1944 after multiple moves the newspaper was housed in a three story industrial building on rue Jean Dolent behind La Sante Prison in the 14th arrondissement of Paris with Big Margot a six ton double jesus machine 26 a linotype a paper cutter and a supply of paper gasoline food water and two tons of coal for the foundry citation needed Le Franc Tireur edit nbsp nbsp Commemoration of the 5 May 1942 meeting between the Franc Tireurs Andre and Alice Vansteenberghe Joly with Jean Moulin Henri Frenay Jean Pierre Levy fr and others You can help expand this section with text translated from the corresponding article in French June 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 6 181 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Franc Tireur mouvement de resistance see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated fr Franc Tireur mouvement de resistance to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Main article Franc Tireur movement Franc Tireur was a movement of the French Resistance founded in Lyon in November 1940 under the name France Liberte 27 and renamed Franc Tireur in December 1941 Le Franc Tireur is also the name of the movement s underground newspaper which printed thirty seven issues between December 1941 and August 1944 28 e It became one of the chief newspapers of the Resistance and continued to be published until 1957 after being renamed Franc Tireur at Liberation with the motto In the vanguard of the Republic From 1957 to 1959 it had the title Paris Journal and then Paris Jour from 1959 to 1972 nbsp Le Mur d Auvergne a local paper of the MUR February 1944 The leader of the movement was Jean Pierre Levy fr Under the aegis of Jean Moulin the movement merged with Liberation sud and Combat to create the new Mouvements Unis de la Resistance MUR Franc Tireur is a movement in the southern zone that has the most roots in Lyon Founded in 1941 by a group of men from various backgrounds it is a movement of personalities with the same political sensitivity opposition to the armistice and from the outset to the Marshal Petain himself 29 Birth of the movement edit The initiators of the movement met at home or during card games at the Cafe Moulin joli The first members were Antoine Avinin member of the Young Republic League political party and left wing Catholic Auguste Pinton fr former city councillor Elie Peju fr and Jean Jacques Soudeille fr former communists turned radicals 30 They and a few others got together at the end of November 1940 and founded a movement they called France Liberte whose mission was to fight against government propaganda and to mobilize against defeat and the authoritarian order which was taking hold The group began by writing leaflets against the Nazis and Petain which were limited to small numbers of hand typed copies due to lack of funds 30 Birth of the paper edit The group had its first wave of success with the arrival of Jean Pierre Levy an Alsatian refugee who brought a roneo in the spring of 1941 and launched the idea of expanding its influence by publishing a real newspaper 30 With the support of the printer Henri Chevalier fr 6000 copies of the first issue were published in December 1941 They were printed on four pages of 21 x 27 5 cm 8 1 2 x 11 inch format The title Franc Tireur is an allusion to the groups of volunteers who formed outside the normal military framework to defend their country and the Republic in the Franco Prussian War The tone of articles was humorous the newspaper s ironic subtitle was monthly as far as possible and by the grace of the Marshal s Police 31 f then monthly in spite of the Gestapo and the Vichy police 32 g and took an offensive tone against the Marshal and the Germans The main themes were opposition to the new order and the occupying Germans denunciation of their misdeeds and the call to resistance by all people of good will Issue number one ended with the words There is only one task to resist to organize 30 h L Humanite edit Main article L Humanite On 27 August 1939 the Edouard Daladier government banned publication of L Humanite after it approved the German Soviet Pact L Humanite then appeared clandestinely for five years 383 issues of 200 000 copies 33 and refrained from attacking the Germans until August 1940 Many of its journalists and manufacturing staff perished in the struggle against the Nazi occupier such as Gabriel Peri responsible for an international column shot on 15 December 1941 at the Fort Mont Valerien and Lucien Sampaix The newspaper reappeared openly once more on 21 August 1944 during the Liberation of Paris The clandestine issue of 20 May 1941 contained an appeal of the French Communist Party PCF concerning the creation of the National Front for the Struggle for the Liberation and Independence of France The CP is directed to all those who think French and want to be act their Frenchness In this National Front for Independence there is room for all French people except for the capitalist dogs and traitors in the service of the invader so that France may be France and not become a Nazi colony national unity must be achieved against the invaders and traitors against the Vichy government which obeys the orders of the German occupiers National Front publications edit nbsp Page 1 the FN paper Resistance of 25 June 1943 from the Seine Inferieure department Further information National Front French Resistance The National Front published numerous national and local clandestine newspapers and flyers 34 From the spring of 1943 to the Liberation 79 publications were published 35 In 1944 1945 they published according to an internal French Communist Party PCF source Seventeen dailies one million sales three weeklies La Marseillaise Ile de France France d abord Action Five literary weeklies 35 periodicals weeklies in the provinces 36 Among them were Les Lettres Francaises Review of French writers assembled in the Comite national des ecrivains fr Founded in October 1941 by Jacques Decour and Jean Paulhan 25 issues were published Les Lettres francaises appeared after Liberation until 1972 L Universite libre fr 104 issues from November 1940 o October 1944 headed by Georges Politzer Jacques Solomon son in law of Paul Langevin and Jacques Decour Front National Parisian newspaper a daily starting in August 1944 directed by Jacques Debu Bridel fr Le Patriote du Sud Ouest organ of the National Front in Toulouse a daily at Liberation 37 its director was then Andre Wurmser fr and was among its young coworkers Pierre Gamarra 38 They also published books and brochures such as a book about the Oradour sur Glane massacre 39 Liberation edit Main articles Liberation newspaper 1941 1964 and Liberation sud The underground paper Liberation was the voice of the Resistance movement Liberation Sud It was launched in July 1941 by Raymond Aubrac and Emmanuel d Astier de La Vigerie It became one of the most important and widely distributed of all Resistance newspapers Liberation reappeared openly in regular publication at the Liberation of France in August 1944 The first published edition of Liberation dated July 1941 resulted in the distribution of over 10 000 copies In autumn 1942 Jules Meurillon was named in charge of the propaganda and distribution service of the organization and successfully increased the annual circulation of Liberation to over 200 000 copies by August 1944 40 This paper published by Resistance movement Liberation Sud is the same paper that was reestablished in 1973 by Jean Paul Sartre and Serge July 41 Temoignage chretien edit nbsp Pierre Chaillet 1900 1972 This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this section with text translated from the corresponding article in French June 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 6 181 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Temoignage chretien see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated fr Temoignage chretien to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message On 16 November 1941 in Lyon Jesuit priest Father Pierre Chaillet secretly published the first Cahier du Temoignage chretien Christian Testimony Notes Entitled France beware of losing your soul i in the form of a small pamphlet hence the name It contained a vibrant appeal to oppose Nazism in the name of Christian values It was entirely written by Father Gaston Fessard Christian Testimony was originally due to be called Catholic Testimony but due to ecumenism and following the participation of Protestants in the secret cell initially made up of Jesuits theologians from the Theologate of Fourviere Lyon the adjective Catholic was changed to Christian Parallel to the Cahiers du Temoignage Chretien which dealt with a single topic in each issue there was also the Courrier Francais du Temoignage Chretien French Christian Testimony Mail from May 1943 appeared in a print run of 100 000 rising to 200 000 copies nbsp Issue no 4 October 1943 The editorial team was headed by Father Pierre Chaillet and included several Jesuits especially from the Jesuit theologate of Fourviere in Lyon including Gaston Fessard and Henri de Lubac secular priests including Pierre Bockel fr and Alexandre Glasberg fr who were joined by lay persons Andre Mandouze Joseph Hours Robert d Harcourt 42 It was printed secretly by a printer from Lyon Eugene Pons who ended up deported and died A unique feature of Temoignage Chretien compared to other Resistance newspapers was its claim to a spiritual resistance fr In fact the basis for Temoignage Chretien s opposition to Nazism is the Gospel and Christian ideals The subtitle of the Temoignage Chretien is Linking the Front of spiritual resistance against Hitlerism j Thirteen issues of Courrier du Temoignage Chretien and fourteen of Cahiers were distributed before the liberation La Vie ouvriere edit nbsp La Vie ouvriere of 28 December 1940 Prohibited from publication in 1939 La Vie ouvriere 43 reappeared as an underground paper in February 1940 In the early days of the occupation Benoit Frachon Andre Tollet Eugene Henaff and a few other union activists from the former United General Confederation of Labor excluded from the General Confederation of Labor in September 1939 who had escaped the search by the French police relaunched the newspaper Two hundred twenty three issues were published throughout the occupation focusing on daily life cost of living food shortages supply problems low salaries and so on It called for struggle union reunification of unions and fought against internal division It denounced employers who had largely sunk into collaboration with the occupiers and reported regularly about the struggles taking place in business citation needed Other titles edit nbsp Nord Eclair of 5 September 1944 announcing the liberation of Lille Others include Arc fr which published 20 issues of two to three hundred copies the first eight of which were under the name Libre France It stopped publishing early in 1941 citation needed The underground paper L Espoir fr was published in Guerande in the northwestern part of France and was published from 13 August 1944 to 10 May 1945 after the local paper the Presqu ile guerandaise was forbidden to publish by the German military authorities in March 1944 In issue number one on 13 August they ran an editorial about their goals 44 This little open flyer shouldn t be called Hope but rather Liaison agent Certainly it brings hope that we will soon be welcoming our liberators hope that this war forced upon us by the Germans will end as soon as possible but also it acts as a connection among people among families all friends dreaming the same dream It s the intermediary that will bring you the voice broadcast by Radio London k Editorial La Presqu ile guerandaise 13 August 1944 On 7 May 1945 they published a special victory edition and the next day they ran a story about the joy in Guerande after they learned of the liberation the day before at 4 30 pm 45 The last issue came out 10 May 1945 after the electricity came back on once again allowing the populace to hear the news live from Radio London and no longer needing to read a printed account of what the radio had broadcast the day before 45 Fiction publishing editA small number of underground presses were also active in printing illegal books and works of literature The most notable example of this was Le Silence de la mer by Jean Bruller published illegally in Paris in 1942 Its publisher Les Editions de Minuit became a successful commercial literary publisher in post war France See also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Journalism portal Brazzaville Conference Allies of World War II Foreign policy of Charles de Gaulle Foreign relations of Vichy France Free France French Fourth Republic French Third Republic Military Administration in France German occupation of France during World War II Arbeiter und Soldat Les Lettres Francaises La Voix du Nord Provisional Government of the French Republic Underground media in German occupied Europe World War II censorship in France See also the French category Journal clandestin de la Resistance francaiseReferences editNotes In French par l action et dans l action from the first issue of Liberation in July 1941 French Chasser l envahisseur Liberation August 1941 French Nous participerons a l ecrasement de l Allemagne fut ce au peril de nos vies August 1941 issue of Les Petites Ailes I only believe Je ne crois que les histoires dont les temoins se feraient egorger 24 Originally with a masthead motto of Organ of the National Liberation Movement fr later Organ of the Mouvements Unis de la Resistance It s ironic subtitle mensuel dans la mesure du possible et par la grace de la police du Marechal monthly in spite of mensuel malgre la Gestapo et la police de Vichy One task Une seule tache s impose resister organiser France prends garde de perdre ton ame Lien du Front de resistance spirituelle contre l Hitlerisme From the editorial in the Presqu ile guerandaise Ce n est pas l espoir que ce petit pli ouvert devrait se nommer mais Agent de liaison Certes il porte l espoir que bientot nous accueillerons nos liberateurs espoir que cette guerre imposee par les Allemands va finir au plus tot mais aussi agent de liaison entre les hommes les familles les amis revant d un meme ideal C est l agent de liaison qui vous apporte la voix emise par radio Londres Footnotes Frinter 2013 Denis 2018 Thibault 2010 Gould 2015 pp 31 2 Jackson 2001 p 403 Gould 2015 p 32 a b Stone 1996 p 55 Jackson 2001 p 408 Gould 2015 p 33 Gould 2015 pp 40 1 Breuer 2000 p 131 134 Taoua Phyllis 2002 Forms of Protest Anti colonialism and Avant gardes in Africa the Caribbean and France Studies in African literature Portsmouth NH ABC CLIO LLC p 180 ISBN 978 0 325 07090 2 OCLC 938978499 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Gallica 2019 LdH MP 2015 a b c d Krivopissko 1986 Wieviorka 1996 p 125 136 a b c Gabert 2000 p 75 82 Ruby 1982 p 11 Combat 1 1941 Ruby 1982 p 15 Combat 50 1943 Ruby 1981 p 99 Courtine Denamy 1999 p 81 Pascal 2011 Vincenot 2009 Monet 1872 p 312 von Bueltzingsloewen 2016 p 274 Christofferson 2006 p 148 CHRD amp Dore Rive 2012 p 78 Laurent Douzou a b c d CHRD amp Dore Rive 2012 p 78 Michel 1980 p 64 MLN 1944 Marcot 2006 p 729 Claude Bellanger Presse clandestine 1940 1944 col kiosque Armand Colin 1961 p 214 215 Philippe Buton article Front national pp 651 653 in Francois Broche Georges Caitucoli and Jean Francois Muracciole Dictionnaire de la France libre Robert Laffont 2010 Marcel Cachin Carnets p 830 volume 4 1935 1947 published under the direction of Denis Peschanski CNRS editions Paris 1997 Henri Lerner La presse toulousaine de la Liberation au 1er depart du general de Gaulle aout 1944 janvier 1946 Annales du Midi Notice Pierre Gamarra par Bernard Epin Le Maitron en ligne Louis Rene 1945 Le Massacre d Oradour sur Glane par les hordes hitleriennes Massacre at Oradour sur Glane by the Hitlerian Hordes Front national OCLC 461446712 Girac Marinier Carine Nimmo Claude Pelpel Moulian Julie eds 2005 Liberation Sud Archive Larousse Dictionnaire de l Histoire de France Larousse 709 Retrieved 21 June 2010 Santi Pascale 13 June 2006 Liberation Edouard de Rothschild veut le depart de Serge July Liberation Edouard de Rothschild wants Serge July to leave Le Monde in French Paris Retrieved 22 June 2020 Duquesne 1986 p 137 Remond amp Bourdin 1978 p 184 185 Yviquel 2008 p 89 a b Yviquel 2008 p 96 Sources Breuer William B 2000 Top Secret Tales of World War II New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 35382 9 OCLC 231845014 Christofferson Thomas Rodney Christofferson Michael Scott 2006 France During World War II From Defeat to Liberation Fordham Univ Press ISBN 978 0 8232 2562 0 Retrieved 18 June 2020 Presse clandestine titres francais tries par lettres alphabetiques Clandestine Press French Titles in Alphabetical Order letter B CNRS Archived from the original on 23 June 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2022 Combat Organe du Mouvement de liberation francaise Organ of the French Liberation Movement Gallica in French December 1941 Combat Gallica in French 1 November 1943 Courtine Denamy Sylvie 1999 Le souci du monde Dialogue entre Hannah Arendt et quelques uns de ses contemporains Caring for the world Dialogue between Hannah Arendt and some of her contemporaries Vrin Denis Cecile 2018 Continuites et divergences dans la presse clandestine de resistants allemands et autrichiens en France pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale KPD KPO Revolutionare Kommunisten et trotskystes Continuities and differences in the underground press of German and Austrian resistance fighters in France during the Second World War KPD KPOe Revolutionary Communnists and Trotskyites thesis in French Bordeaux 3 Dore Rive Isabelle Centre d Histoire de la Resistance et de la Deportation 2012 Une ville dans la guerre Lyon 1939 1945 A City in the War Lyon 1939 1945 in French Lyon Fage ISBN 978 2 84975 279 1 OCLC 828792300 Duquesne Jacques 1986 Les catholiques francais sous l occupation French Catholics under the Occupation in French Newly revised and corrected ed Grasset OCLC 571816903 Feletin Clarisse 2004 Helene Viannay l instinct de resistance de l occupation a l ecole des Glenans The instinct for resistance to the occupation at the school in Glenans in French Paris Pascal ISBN 978 2 35019 000 6 OCLC 57056918 La presse de la Resistance en France Press of the French Resistance franceinter fr in French 27 May 2013 Gabert Michele 2000 Entres en resistance in French Grenoble presse universitaire de Grenoble pp 75 82 Bir Hakeim Gallica Biblioteque Nationale de France La presse clandestine de la Seconde Guerre mondiale Le Blog Gallica Bibliotheque nationale de France 28 May 2015 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Gould Sophie 2015 Mightier than the Sword Liberation and the Clandestine Press in France 1940 44 PDF Yale University infoNormandie 10 December 2013 Deces de Marie Therese Fainstein l hommage de Didier Marie a une heroine de la Resistance Death of Marie Therese Fainstein Didier Marie s homage to a heroine of the Resistance infoNormandie in French Jackson Julian 2001 France The Dark Years 1940 1944 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820706 9 Madame Fainstein et la ville de Dieppe Madame Fainstein and the City of Dieppe Je me souviens in French 2013 Krivopissko G Willard G 1986 Presse et Radio 1940 1944 PDF Musee de la Resistance de Chateaubriant pdf in French Ivry Archived from the original PDF on 31 December 2018 La liberte de la presse en France depuis la Revolution Freedom of the Press in France since the Revolution Ligue des Droits de l Homme de Midi Pyrenees in French LDH Midi Pyrenees 2015 Marcot Francois Leroux Bruno Levisse Touze Christine 2006 Dictionnaire historique de la Resistance Resistance interieure et France libre Historical Dictionary of the Resistance Bouquins in French Paris R Laffont ISBN 9782221099971 OCLC 421137830 Michel Henri 1980 Histoire de la Resistance en France History of the Resistance in France Que sais je 429 PUF ISBN 978 2130 36520 4 OCLC 924704972 Miller Russell 1979 The Resistance Time Life Books ISBN 978 0 8094 2522 8 Retrieved 17 February 2021 In France the most popular symbol of resistance was the doublebarred cross of Lorraine adopted by the London based leader of the Free French General Charles de Gaulle Monet Adolphe Lucien 1872 Le conducteur de machines typographiques guide pratique par A L Monet prote des machines a l imprimerie J Claye Practical guide to typographical machines by A L Monet workshop manager of the J Claye printing press Paris Jules Claye OCLC 563914755 Mouvement de liberation nationale 1944 Le Franc tireur mensuel dans la mesure du possible et par la grace de la police du Marechal BNF Gallica exemplaires du journal pour l anneee 1944 in French Kidder David S Oppenheim Noah D 3 October 2006 The Intellectual Devotional Revive Your Mind Complete Your Education and Roam Confidently with the Cultured Class Rodale Books ISBN 978 1 59486 513 8 During World War II the underground fighters of the French Resistance adopted the cross of Lorraine Pascal Blaise 2011 1st pub 1669 D Descotes G Proust eds Pensees de Blaise Pascal Pensees de Pascal in French Remond Rene Bourdin Janine 1978 La France et les Francais en 1938 1939 France and the French in 1938 1939 Paris Presses de la Fondation nationale des sciences politiques ISBN 978 2 7246 0411 5 OCLC 469755034 Ruby Marcel 1981 La contre Resistance a Lyon 1940 1944 Les Hommes et les lettres Histoire in French Lyon Editions L Hermes ISBN 2 85934 091 2 Ruby Marcel 1982 Les Mouvements unis de Resistance Cahiers d Histoire de la Guerre 9 in French Lyon Editions L Hermes ISBN 2 85934 104 8 Stone Harry 1996 Writing in the Shadow Resistance Publications in Occupied Europe 1st ed London Cass ISBN 0 7146 3424 7 Thibault Laurence 2010 Imprimeurs et editeurs dans la Resistance Printers and publishers in the Resistance Collection Cahiers de la Resistance in French AERI La documentation Francaise Time Inc 14 August 1944 LIFE Time Inc ISSN 0024 3019 When de Gaulle in London in 1940 lighted the flame of French resistance he had had no political experience In this there were advantages as well as disadvantages He chose as the symbol of his movement the Cross of Lorraine Vincenot Alain 7 January 2009 20 000e numero France Soir est issu d un journal clandestin sous l Occupation Issue 20 000 France Soir came from a secret newspaper during the Occupation France Soir in French Archived from the original on 21 September 2009 von Bueltzingsloewen Isabelle Douzou Laurent Durand Jean Dominique Joly Herve Solchany Jean 2016 Lyon dans la Seconde guerre mondiale villes et metropoles a l epreuve du conflit Lyon in the Second World War Cities and Metropolises facing the Test of Conflict Collection Histoire 2016 4 Rennes Presses universitaires de Rennes ISBN 978 2 7535 4359 1 OCLC 980931068 Un des premiers journaux de la Resistance fut Le Libre Poitou One of the first newspapers of the Resistance was Free Poitou vrid memorial Presse de la Resistance dans le departement de la Vienne Archived from the original on 8 June 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2020 The first issue was in circulation by 11 November 1940 Le premier exemplaire circula des le 11 novembre 1940 Wieviorka Olivier 1996 La presse clandestine Melanges de l ecole francaise de Rome 108 1 125 136 doi 10 3406 mefr 1996 4426 Yviquel Louis Bourse Aurelia Olivaux Andre Gallice Alain 2008 L Espoir journal clandestin publie a Guerande du 13 aout 1944 au 10 mai 1945 L Espoir underground newspaper published in Guerande from 13 August 1944 to 10 May 1945 Les cahiers du pays de Guerande Notes from the Guerande in French 47 Societe des Amis de Guerande Further reading edit La presse clandestine de 1940 a 1945 The Clandestine Press from 1940 to 1945 PDF www tracesdhistoire fr External links edit nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article De Gaulle s appeal from London the Collection of the Institute for the History of Present Times fr IHTP of the French National Centre for Scientific Research the student press can be accessed at the website of the Conservatory of Student Memories notably almost the entire run of the resistance paper L Universite libre The Free University Archived from the original on 25 November 2006 Principaux titres de presse clandestine de la Resistance Principal Titles of the Clandestine Press of the Resistance Gallica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Underground media in German occupied France amp oldid 1206596837 Temoignage chretien, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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