The Fort Worth Press - Three heroines of the French Resistance

USD -
AED 3.673042
AFN 68.858766
ALL 88.802398
AMD 387.151613
ANG 1.799401
AOA 927.769041
ARS 961.359012
AUD 1.46886
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.70397
BAM 1.749922
BBD 2.015926
BDT 119.312844
BGN 1.749287
BHD 0.376236
BIF 2894.376594
BMD 1
BND 1.290118
BOB 6.899298
BRL 5.515104
BSD 0.998434
BTN 83.448933
BWP 13.198228
BYN 3.267481
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012526
CAD 1.35775
CDF 2871.000362
CHF 0.850342
CLF 0.033728
CLP 930.650396
CNY 7.051904
CNH 7.043005
COP 4153.983805
CRC 518.051268
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 98.657898
CZK 22.451404
DJF 177.79269
DKK 6.68204
DOP 59.929316
DZD 132.138863
EGP 48.452557
ERN 15
ETB 115.859974
EUR 0.894904
FJD 2.200804
FKP 0.761559
GBP 0.75092
GEL 2.730391
GGP 0.761559
GHS 15.696327
GIP 0.761559
GMD 68.503851
GNF 8626.135194
GTQ 7.71798
GYD 208.866819
HKD 7.790095
HNL 24.767145
HRK 6.799011
HTG 131.740706
HUF 352.160388
IDR 15160.8
ILS 3.777515
IMP 0.761559
INR 83.48045
IQD 1307.922874
IRR 42092.503816
ISK 136.260386
JEP 0.761559
JMD 156.86485
JOD 0.708504
JPY 143.90404
KES 128.797029
KGS 84.238504
KHR 4054.936698
KMF 441.350384
KPW 899.999433
KRW 1332.490383
KWD 0.30507
KYD 0.832014
KZT 478.691898
LAK 22047.152507
LBP 89409.743659
LKR 304.621304
LRD 199.686843
LSL 17.527759
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.741198
MAD 9.681206
MDL 17.42227
MGA 4515.724959
MKD 55.129065
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.999955
MOP 8.014495
MRU 39.677896
MUR 45.880378
MVR 15.360378
MWK 1731.132286
MXN 19.416804
MYR 4.205039
MZN 63.850377
NAD 17.527759
NGN 1639.450377
NIO 36.746745
NOK 10.482404
NPR 133.518543
NZD 1.603206
OMR 0.384512
PAB 0.998434
PEN 3.742316
PGK 3.9082
PHP 55.653038
PKR 277.414933
PLN 3.82535
PYG 7789.558449
QAR 3.640048
RON 4.449904
RSD 104.886038
RUB 92.240594
RWF 1345.94909
SAR 3.752452
SBD 8.306937
SCR 13.046124
SDG 601.503676
SEK 10.170404
SGD 1.291304
SHP 0.761559
SLE 22.847303
SLL 20969.494858
SOS 570.572183
SRD 30.205038
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.736188
SYP 2512.529936
SZL 17.534112
THB 32.927038
TJS 10.61334
TMT 3.5
TND 3.025276
TOP 2.342104
TRY 34.124875
TTD 6.791035
TWD 31.981038
TZS 2725.719143
UAH 41.267749
UGX 3698.832371
UYU 41.256207
UZS 12705.229723
VEF 3622552.534434
VES 36.777762
VND 24605
VUV 118.722009
WST 2.797463
XAF 586.90735
XAG 0.03211
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.739945
XOF 586.90735
XPF 106.706035
YER 250.325037
ZAR 17.38465
ZMK 9001.203587
ZMW 26.433141
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

Three heroines of the French Resistance
Three heroines of the French Resistance / Photo: © AFP

Three heroines of the French Resistance

Without firing a gun or shedding any blood, Odile de Vasselot, Odette Niles and Michele Agniel were among the thousands of women who took part in the resistance against the Nazi German occupation of France during World War II.

Text size:

Their acts -- which included ferrying messages across enemy lines, smuggling packages and helping Resistance fighters and Allied airmen escape -- carried the risk of imprisonment, torture and even death.

And yet for decades after the war, the roles played by unsung war heroes like these were greatly underestimated and rarely documented.

Aged 101, 100 and 96 respectively, de Vasselot, Niles and Agniel spoke to AFP on the eve of International Women's Day about their part in combatting tyranny.

- Odile de Vasselot -

For 18-year-old de Vasselot, doing nothing was not an option in 1940 when Nazi banners and propaganda posters -- either in German or from the collaborationist regime led by Marshal Philippe Petain -- started appearing on the streets of occupied France.

"I want to fight back!" she said to herself, without knowing how she, a young woman from a well-to-do Catholic family, could help defend her country.

Born in 1922 into a military family, she moved to Paris with her mother and sisters after her father, a soldier, was imprisoned by the Germans.

On November 11, 1940, she took a homemade pompom in blue, white and red to join a student demonstration on the Champs-Elysees avenue, defying a curfew in one of the first public acts of resistance in France.

Two years later, she joined the Resistance as a courier, ferrying packages every week by train between the occupied northern half of the country and the southeastern Free Zone, without daring to peek at the contents.

In 1943, the young woman who went by "Jeanne" on her missions began helping Allied airmen cross France -- picking them up from the Belgian border, providing them with papers and buying their tickets to Spain on their circuitous route back to Britain.

Several times she barely escaped arrest.

On January 4, 1944, she was accompanying two British soldiers on a train when the Gestapo raided the carriage.

They arrested the two men, who were sitting a few rows away from Odile to avoid drawing attention to her.

"I still had their ticket stubs in my pocket," she told AFP. "I ate them".

- Odette Niles -

A young Communist militant before the war broke out, Niles sprang into action as soon as the war started, handing out fliers on the streets of Paris while still at school.

On August 13, 1941, she was arrested along with 16 boys on her way to a demonstration.

Three of the boys were executed and the others imprisoned.

Niles was sent to the Choisel internment camp in western France, where she was kept in barracks swarming with vermin that had wooden crates for beds.

At the camp, the 18-year-old found fleeting romance with Guy Moquet, one of the young heroes of the Resistance, who was executed by firing squad in October 1941.

She was moved from camp to camp for three years before escaping in 1944 and joining the Resistance in Bordeaux. There she met her future husband, Resistance fighter and fellow Communist Maurice Niles.

The pair remained active in left-wing politics for the rest of their lives.

- Michele Agniel -

Agniel was the 14-year-old daughter of a World War I veteran when the armistice was signed in the summer of 1940, beginning Germany's occupation of France.

"Right away my father said, 'We have to do something'," said Agniel, who grew up in the Paris suburb of Saint-Mande in a family she described as "profoundly patriotic".

She started smuggling fliers in her schoolbag "between her music copy and her history book".

At checkpoints she would open her bag, but never got searched. Who, after all, would suspect a schoolgirl?

In 1942, the family joined an underground cell that hid escaped prisoners of war, mostly US and British pilots.

Agniel's job was to meet them in the countryside and have them follow her back to Paris by train. She then took them to a photo booth in central Paris to get pictures for false documents.

If anyone asked what she is up to, she had her answer ready: "They're deaf mutes on their way to a special facility in Toulouse", a city in southwest France.

In 1944, two weeks before her final school exams, she was arrested with her parents after an informer alerted the police, and put on the last deportation train out of Paris, just before the city was liberated.

Her father was sent to the Buchenwald camp, where he died.

Agniel and her mother were interned first at Ravensbruck and then at Koenigsberg, where they were liberated by Russia's Red Army on February 5, 1945, and repatriated to Paris.

After the war Agniel became a teacher and for a long time kept silent about her past activism. But the rise of a revisionist far right prompted her to begin telling her story in schools.

Today, she said her testimony had taken on new urgency.

"With what is happening in Ukraine, I am reliving June 1940... We did it, why can't the Ukrainians do it too? We have to help them!"

F.Carrillo--TFWP