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Raymond Aubrac

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Raymond Aubrac (Samuel)
son of Albert and Hélène Falk
born in: Vesoul, Haute-Saône,France
in: 31/07/1914
Military Service: France
Partisan Service: France
Partisans: France
Passed away in Paris, France
in: 10/04/2012

Biography

Born Raymond Samuel into a middle-class Jewish family in Vesoul, Haute-Saone. His parents were shop owners. Active in left-wing student politics, he first met a fellow young radical, Lucie Bernard, during meetings of students with Communist leanings while he was pursuing civil engineering studies at the Ecole nationale des ponts et chaussees from 1934 to 1937. He received a scholarship to further his studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University for a year, starting from the summer of 1937.
Samuel was serving in the French army as an engineering officer on the Maginot Line at the outbreak of the Second World War. He met Lucie Bernard again in Strasbourg. They married on 14 December 1939 in Dijon. Samuel was taken prisoner by the German army on 21 June 1940, but he managed to escape from the internment camp with the aide of his wife. He and Lucie joined the French Resistance in October 1940. He also became an attache to the staff of the French Army. He adopted several noms de guerre, among them "Vallet, Ermelin, Balmont and Aubrac". Their Resistance activities started off with buying boxes of chalk and writing graffiti on walls. They then moved on to writing tracts and putting them into people's letterboxes. In the autumn of 1940, they also formed one of the first underground Resistance groups - Liberation-Sud - in Lyon. In May 1941, after the birth of their first child Jean-Pierre, they helped Emmanuel d'Astier de La Vigerie to set up an underground newspaper called Liberation to promote the French Resistance. Raymond Aubrac was arrested by the Milice on March 15, 1943 in a routine raid. He was operating with fake identity papers under the pseudonym Franeois Vallet. His captors had no idea whom they had captured. He was eventually released two months later.
On June 21, 1943, Aubrac was one of eight senior Resistance leaders, including Jean Moulin, secretly meeting in a doctor's surgery in the Lyon suburb of Caluire when Gestapo officers, under the orders of Klaus Barbie, stormed the place and arrested all the eight leaders. The Caluire meeting was held to select a replacement for Charles Delestraint as the commander of the Armee secrete. Delestraint had been arrested twelve days earlier by the Gestapo in Paris on 9 June. Aubrac was arrested under the pseudonym Claude Ermelin. Taken to Montluc prison in Lyon, the eight leaders were interrogated and tortured under the direction of Barbie. Aubrac was sentenced to death by a Paris court, but the execution was not quickly carried out because the authorities still hoped to obtain intelligence from him. Lucie Aubrac helped to organise his escape from the prison. Lucie, who was then pregnant with her second child, met Barbie and claimed to be carrying Raymond’s child. She also lied that they were unmarried and that the child would therefore be born illegitimate unless the Gestapo would permit them to conduct a secret wedding. She mentioned a specific provision under French law called "marriage in extremis" - a person condemned to death may marry civilly before execution - applied to Raymond Aubrac. Barbie refused, but she managed to later persuade another Gestapo officer (holding the rank of lieutenant) after bribing him with a silk scarf and champagne, to grant them the permit to go ahead with the "wedding". However, Barbie allowed her to meet face to face with her imprisoned husband. During the meeting, she told her husband of the Resistance's plan to attack the German truck that was to transfer him back to prison from the scene of the "wedding ceremony". On October 21, 1943 Aubrac was taken from his prison cell at Montluc and driven to the “wedding ceremony” at the Gestapo headquarters. Right after the "wedding ceremony", Aubrac and thirteen other captured Resistance members were transported to the prison in a truck. En route, the truck was ambushed by a gang of Resistance fighters in four cars, led by the six-month pregnant Lucie Aubrac. Five Germans guards and the truck driver were killed and all the captured Resistance members, including Aubrac, were freed. It was now too dangerous for the Aubracs to carry on with their resistance activities, and they hid for several months in the French countryside. Hunted by the Gestapo, the couple was evacuated by the Royal Air Force to London in February 1944. A few days later, their daughter, Catherine, the second of their three children, was born. They later joined Charles de Gaulle's government in exile.
The Aubracs' wartime exploits made interesting movie material. Two French films, Claude Berri’s Lucie Aubrac (1997) and Boulevard des hirondelles (1992), have immortalized the Aubracs in the nation's collective memory.
Raymond Aubrac's parents, whom he had tried unsuccessfully to convince to leave for Switzerland, were arrested in France, deported to Auschwitz Concentration Camp by convoy No. 66 on 20 January 1944 and died there.
In August 1944, Charles de Gaulle appointed Aubrac to the post of commissaire de la republique in Marseille. The mission of these commissaires was to establish some form of provisional authority in the areas of France just liberated from the Germans. Aubrac organised the purge of the police forces and oversaw the often brutal treatment meted out to suspected collaborators with the Nazis. He requisitioned a number of local industries, leading to allegations that he was really working in the interests of the Communists. Aubrac was dismissed from his post and recalled to Paris after only four months.
After the end of the Second World War, Aubrac was appointed to a senior post by the Ministry of Reconstruction from 1945 to 1948, during which he oversaw reconstruction and mine clearance.
In 1947 and 1950, he was a witness for the prosecution during two trials of fellow French Resistance leader Rene Hardy, who was accused of betraying Jean Moulin to the Gestapo but eventually acquitted. Although both Aubrac and Hardy had both been detained and released prior to the Caluire meeting (supposedly creating an opportunity for the Germans to "turn" them), then arrested at the Caluire raid, and subsequently escaped Gestapo custody, Aubrac alleged that in Hardy's case his escape was too easy, claiming that when Hardy made a run for it, "from all the Germans with their sub-machine guns, there were only a couple of scattered shots."
Aubrac's relations with Charles de Gaulle were sometimes tense because of his Communist leanings. When Ho Chi Minh came to France to negotiate Vietnam's independence in 1946, he decided to stay in the Aubracs' home for several months and he and Raymond Aubrac became friends. Aubrac's undisguised Communist sympathies made him a controversial figure with the French right. He supported the Vietnamese rebellion against French colonial rule in the 1950s.
In 1948, Aubrac founded an institute - Bureau d'etudes et de recherches pour l'industrie moderne (BERIM) (the Study and Research Group for Modern Industry) - to encourage trade with Communist countries in the Eastern Bloc. He headed this institute for ten years. He also served in a series of international roles. He was a director of the United Nations' Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) from 1964 to 1975. In 1978, he joined UNESCO, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization cultural agency, to work on cooperation projects.
Aubrac worked on many civil engineering projects in Europe, North Africa and Asia. In 1948, He helped to create a civil engineering consultancy firm, at first working mainly with Communist-run local authorities, then in eastern Europe. It established close links with eastern Europe, and this later led to allegations that it was really a front to raise funds for the Communist party.
He served as an technical adviser to the government of Morocco, which has just attained independence from France, from 1958 to 1963.
Aubrac was to be used in the late 1960s by Henry Kissinger as a secret intermediary between the Americans and the North Vietnamese at the height of the Vietnam war. In the early 1970s, as America tried to negotiate an end to the Vietnam War, Aubrac served as a mediator between the American and Vietnamese governments. He also joined a group of intellectuals and scientists working to end the war. In 1973, he worked with the United Nations Secretary-General, Kurt Waldheim, on the follow-up to the signing of the Paris Peace Accords in January 1973 to end the Vietnam War. In 1975, he was employed by Kurt Waldheim to communicate with the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in the last few months of the war. In 1975, while working on rebuilding projects in Vietnam, Aubrac witnessed the Fall of Saigon.
Shortly before his death in 1990, Klaus Barbie issued a statement saying it was not Rene Hardy who had betrayed the secret of Jean Moulin's 1943 Caluire meeting with the Resistance leaders, but Raymond Aubrac. The same allegations were then insinuated in a book (Aubrac, Lyon 1943; first published by Albin Michel in 1997) written by a French journalist and historian, Gerard Chauvy. In 1997, the Aubracs, feeling outraged by such allegations and attempting to clear their names, submitted themselves to a “jury” of French historians set up by the left leaning Liberation newspaper and led by Moulin’s secretary and biographer, Daniel Cordier. Their report dismissed the notion that the Aubracs were collaborators but noted inconsistencies in the Aubracs' accounts and a failure to explain why Raymond Aubrac alone was not moved to Paris like the others who were captured at Caluire, thus enabling his escape. Both the Aubracs, especially Lucie, remained bitter about what they perceived as unnecessarily hostile treatment. In his book Resistance and Betrayal: The Death and Life of the Greatest Hero of the French Resistance (2002), Patrick Marnham suggested that since Aubrac's overrriding allegiance was to communism he would not have considered himself a traitor had he compromised Moulin, claiming that French Communists did at times give information to the Gestapo.
In 1996, Aubrac published his autobiography Oe la memoire s'attarde ("Where the memory lingers").
In his later life, Aubrac made frequent visits to schools to educate the younger generation about the dangers of totalitarianism. He also sought to promote remembrance of the French Resistance.
Aubrac endorsed the Socialist Party's Franeois Hollande for France's 2012 two-round presidential election, starting on April 22. Hollande said that he had met with Aubrac about three weeks before his death and Aubrac told him that he would be closely monitoring the election