Third Party Press

France opens archives on second world war's Vichy regime

jhv 41

Well-known member
FYI, new access here may provide some new info to those who are doing research into Beutewaffen. Looks like only in-person requests for now, but I have heard they will digitize/offer online access in the future (probably in 10 years though!)....



Wednesday, December 30, 2015, 07:38 by PA

France opens archives on second world war's Vichy regime

Files on the French resistance, communists and Jews hunted by the collaborationist Vichy government in France during the Second World War are now accessible to the public.

The French government has opened police and legal archives, allowing free access to hundred of thousands of documents from the regime that collaborated with the Nazi German occupiers between 1940 and 1944, as well as to investigative documents from the post-liberation government.

The order, which was signed on December 24 and came into force on Monday, will not only help the work of historians. It will also bring more citizens into the archives' lecture rooms to learn about what happened to their ancestors during the Second World War.

For instance, families of people arrested under the Vichy regime as well as descendants of collaborationists prosecuted after the war will be able to consult police investigation documents and proceedings of military courts.

War archives are kept in different places all around France, depending on their geographical and administrative origin. Many were already available to researchers, but they first had to file complex request forms and it could take months before they got an answer.

Now, anyone can come into a reading room, ask for a document and get it "within a minute or 15 minutes, just the time needed to go and get it from the shelves", said the chief of Paris police archives, Pascale Etiennette.

Marshal Philippe Petain's collaborationist government, which signed an armistice with the German occupiers in 1940, remains a sensitive issue in France.

Some French people supported Marshal Petain's government while others engaged in the Resistance movement led by General Charles De Gaulle.

The decision by the French government to open the archives came in response to a call by French historians, including Gilles Morin, a Second World War specialist.

"Many people who were doing research about their father or grandfather who had been deported for example, as we often see, were blocked by these administrative obstacles," he said.

Historians do not expect any major revelations, since the period has already been extensively studied, but hope to gain a more detailed understanding of events.

"Let's be clear, there won't be any revolution in what we already know about WWII but we'll finally have the possibility to work, understand several things, the Franco-German relationships, between Vichy and the collaborationists, the people, the elites," Mr Morin stressed.

To the regret of the historians, documents classified as national defence are not covered by the new government order and most of the archives of the French intelligence services regarding the period remain out of reach.

"Here we have a problem because everything, or almost everything, is top secret," historian Francois Le Goarant de Tromelin said.

He is currently working on the case of Adolphe Rosenthal, a Jewish jeweller murdered in Paris in September 1941 under unclear circumstances.

Getting access to archives "will help some families but mainly, it will help them psychologically because it will tell them what really happened", the historian said while studying the 91-page police report about Mr Rosenthal's murder dating from October 1941.

"Some people, as this man here, have been assassinated but we don't know why, we don't know what happened ... We might know it 70, 80 years."

http://www.timesofmalta.com/article...ives-on-second-world-wars-vichy-regime.597171
 

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