BORING INTRO: ( This thread is a follow up of a thread from one year ago where I posted photos of a tunic belonging to a survivor of Dachau. The old thread is here: http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...ghlight=dachau
I was maybe a bit naive to post photos of the tunic last year without having done more research into the tunic... Anyways, last week, I got more information about the original owner of my tunic, that I will post in this thread. The owner is listed in the book "Le train de la mort", or "The train of death" by Christian Bernadac. The story of this train is so amazing that I will start by briefly resuming what is written in the book, before presenting you the tunic and additional info. What is written below is mostly based on the book "Le train de la mort", as well as on info provided by the familly of the owner of the tunic. The book "Le train de la mort" is exelent by the way, written with many extracts of accounts of people who were in the train. I would advise anybody with an interest in humanity to read it)
Clément means "mercifull" in French, and it is this word that was chosen to name a child born in Nice, France, in 1904. I will keep the familly name private.
In 1944, Clément had a familly of his own, and Clément and his son were both arrested by the Gestapo in February 1944, in the Var region, near Nice. I am not sure yet what their crime was, but it was related to resistance activity.
The son managed to somehow escape from the hands of the Germans, but the father was put in the Beaumettes prison in Marseille. He was then sent to a camp in Compiègne, near Paris. This was the camp from which the convois left for Germany and the concentration camps.
I was maybe a bit naive to post photos of the tunic last year without having done more research into the tunic... Anyways, last week, I got more information about the original owner of my tunic, that I will post in this thread. The owner is listed in the book "Le train de la mort", or "The train of death" by Christian Bernadac. The story of this train is so amazing that I will start by briefly resuming what is written in the book, before presenting you the tunic and additional info. What is written below is mostly based on the book "Le train de la mort", as well as on info provided by the familly of the owner of the tunic. The book "Le train de la mort" is exelent by the way, written with many extracts of accounts of people who were in the train. I would advise anybody with an interest in humanity to read it)
Clément means "mercifull" in French, and it is this word that was chosen to name a child born in Nice, France, in 1904. I will keep the familly name private.
In 1944, Clément had a familly of his own, and Clément and his son were both arrested by the Gestapo in February 1944, in the Var region, near Nice. I am not sure yet what their crime was, but it was related to resistance activity.
The son managed to somehow escape from the hands of the Germans, but the father was put in the Beaumettes prison in Marseille. He was then sent to a camp in Compiègne, near Paris. This was the camp from which the convois left for Germany and the concentration camps.
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