Two weeks ago, in a talk about the German military cemetery at La Cambe/Normandy, I mentioned the fact that two German women are buried in this cemetery, Hildegard Oesswein and Marie-Luise Micknat. This statement prompted a fellow tour guide from Normandy to contact me to bring to my attention the nearly 100 women, female teenagers, and little girls buried in the German military cemetery at Mont d' Huisnes (near Mont St.-Michel).
Who were these women, teenagers and little girls and what was their fate?
Veronique provided me with a list from the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (German War Graves Commission) showing the ages, names, and military affiliations, if any, of these individuals. All of the women have last names that sound very German. A quick count revealed that 17 women worked for the Todt organization, were Red Cross nurses, or were staff or signals aides. These young women either were killed in the Battle of Normandy or were victims of bombing raids, accidents, or disease during the four-year German occupation.
But what about the other women and the young children/babies?
The list provided by the Volksbund showed that the women were mostly older women, the oldest born in 1860, the youngest baby girls only between 1 and 2 months old.
A few hours of internet research revealed the following:
The women in question were mostly from eastern France, i.e., from the départments Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin (with the exception of Belfort and its environs), as well as from the northern part of Lorraine, including the départment of Moselle, and from parts of the départments of Meurthe and Vosges, all of which had been French territory before 1871 but were annexed by the German Empire after the end of the Franco-Prussian War in 1871 with the defeat of France.
After the defeat of Imperial Germany in World War I in 1918, these territories were returned to France. Only 22 years later, they changed hands again and came under German civil administration after France surrendered at the end of June 1940.
Although the five départments were not annexed by the 3rd Reich, the civil administrations of these areas had the task of Germanizing them. The French living in these departments were now given the status of German citizens, whether they wanted it or not. The manpower shortage, which was already becoming apparent in 1942, prompted the Wehrmacht to draft 100,000 Alsatians and 30,000 Moselans as "ethnic Germans" into the Wehrmacht and the Waffen-SS between 1942 and 1944. The conscription violated international law since nationals of the enemy were not allowed to be drafted. These unfortunate young men became known as "Malgré Nous" (Eng: "Against Our Will"), they were mostly deployed on the Eastern Front, and more than 40,000 were killed in their involuntary service for the 3rd Reich.
And it is these 130,000 "Malgré Nous" who are the link and take us back to the women and children buried at Mont d' Huisnes.
When the Allies liberated Alsace and Lorraine between the fall of 1944 and March 1945, the advancing troops encountered thousands of women who were either married to "Malgré Nous" or had other close family ties to these men (e.g., grandmothers, mothers, sisters). These close links made these women suspicious: would they be loyal to the victorious French state or would they be Nazi sympathizers?
To play it safe, it was decided to move thousands of "German" civilians (women, men, children, babies, and even entire families) to the other end of the country, to the Vienne department, and to "accommodate and guard" them at the so-called "Centre de séjour surveillé," the Chauvinerie camp in Poitiers.
The camp was under the supervision of the French Ministry of the Interior. What was planned for these unfortunate individuals, suspected of being Nazis, I do not know, but as the name of the camp implies, they were placed under surveillance in a camp they could not leave.
The sanitary conditions in the Chauvinerie camp were disastrous, and the inhumane conditions were made worse by the corrupt camp director, a retired lieutenant colonel of the gendarmerie, a certain Justin Blanchard, who embezzled food and especially milk rations for the children and sold them elsewhere.
In April 1945, up to 102 children aged 0 to 3 were counted in the camp. The living conditions were appalling. Testimonies speak of "people dressed in rags" who slept in bunks, of which "only one in 30 was furnished with straw." Apparently, the Ministry of the Interior was informed of this situation by letters dated "May 30, June 1, and June 8, 1945," according to which "the weak internees are all condemned to disappear because of the lack of food and proper care".
Especially during the hot summer of 1945, the mortality rate soared and was seven times higher than in other camps of the same type. The Red Cross reported an "extremely alarming sanitary situation." Deaths were numerous: 33 children in May, and 57 children between July and August. Of the 65 children born in the camp, none survived.
The Red Cross cited two main reasons for this mortality: the poor condition of many internees even before they arrived at the camp, but also the living conditions in the camp itself. Despite all the warnings addressed to the government, it did not react until September 1945. When the judicial investigation was opened for "theft to the detriment of the internees and the state," several crimes were found. The camp guards testified that abuses were added to the material shortages and difficulties. The money and personal belongings of the detainees, confiscated upon their arrival at the camp, were stolen and sold. The camp administration and some guards diverted some of the food, even the milk for the infants so that the rations were extremely meager: one carrot soup at each meal and one loaf of bread for three people.
The investigation revealed the abuses and embezzlement in the camp. The case was widely reported in the press. However, few convictions resulted. Lieutenant Colonel Blanchard, the director of the camp, was suspended (before being retired), as was the manager and chief of staff (who was none other than the son of the director). All the others were amnestied.
But how did the women get to Mont d' Huisnes?
Originally they were buried near the La Chauvinerie camp, but in the late 1950s the German government, in consultation with the French government and the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (German War Graves Commission), decided to transfer the remains of those who were not buried in Alsace-Lorraine (at the request of their families) to the German military cemetery at Mont d' Huisnes, which was under construction.
Today, 73 women and female children from the eastern departments of France rest in the cemetery's crypts, another 9 women and female children rest in the mass grave at the entrance to the cemetery, and it is unknown to me how many of the 58 unknown dead in the mass grave were also female.
All war dead are tragic, but for these women, who were made German citizens and who had some family ties to "Malgré Nous," the suffering in the infamous Chauvinerie camp and their resulting death is all the more tragic.
I will think of these women the next time I visit Mont d' Huisnes cemetery. Please do the same.
Rest in peace, poor souls. ade these women suspicious: would they be loyal to the victorious French state or would they be Nazi sympathizers?
To play it safe, it was decided to move thousands of "German" civilians (women, men, children, babies, and even entire families) to the other end of the country, to the Vienne department, and to "accommodate and guard" them at the so-called "Centre de séjour surveillé," the Chauvinerie camp in Poitiers.
The camp was under the supervision of the French Ministry of the Interior. What was planned for these unfortunate individuals, suspected of being Nazis, I do not know, but as the name of the camp implies, they were placed under surveillance in a camp they could not leave.
The sanitary conditions in the Chauvinerie camp were disastrous, and the inhumane conditions were made worse by the corrupt camp director, a retired lieutenant colonel of the gendarmerie, a certain Justin Blanchard, who embezzled food and especially milk rations for the children and sold them elsewhere.
In April 1945, up to 102 children aged 0 to 3 were counted in the camp. The living conditions were appalling. Testimonies speak of "people dressed in rags" who slept in bunks, of which "only one in 30 was furnished with straw." Apparently, the Ministry of the Interior was informed of this situation by letters dated "May 30, June 1, and June 8, 1945," according to which "the weak internees are all condemned to disappear because of the lack of food and proper care".
Especially during the hot summer of 1945, the mortality rate soared and was seven times higher than in other camps of the same type. The Red Cross reported an "extremely alarming sanitary situation." Deaths were numerous: 33 children in May, and 57 children between July and August. Of the 65 children born in the camp, none survived.
The Red Cross cited two main reasons for this mortality: the poor condition of many internees even before they arrived at the camp, but also the living conditions in the camp itself. Despite all the warnings addressed to the government, it did not react until September 1945. When the judicial investigation was opened for "theft to the detriment of the internees and the state," several crimes were found. The camp guards testified that abuses were added to the material shortages and difficulties. The money and personal belongings of the detainees, confiscated upon their arrival at the camp, were stolen and sold. The camp administration and some guards diverted some of the food, even the milk for the infants so that the rations were extremely meager: one carrot soup at each meal and one loaf of bread for three people.
The investigation revealed the abuses and embezzlement in the camp. The case was widely reported in the press. However, few convictions resulted. Lieutenant Colonel Blanchard, the director of the camp, was suspended (before being retired), as was the manager and chief of staff (who was none other than the son of the director). All the others were amnestied.
But how did the women get to Mont d' Huisnes?
Originally they were buried near the La Chauvinerie camp, but in the late 1950s the German government, in consultation with the French government and the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (German War Graves Commission), decided to transfer the remains of those who were not buried in Alsace-Lorraine (at the request of their families) to the German military cemetery at Mont d' Huisnes, which was under construction.
Today, 73 women and female children from the eastern departments of France rest in the cemetery's crypts, another 9 women and female children rest in the mass grave at the entrance to the cemetery, and it is unknown to me how many of the 58 unknown dead in the mass grave were also female.
All war dead are tragic, but for these women, who were made German citizens and who had some family ties to "Malgré Nous," the suffering in the infamous Chauvinerie camp and their resulting death is all the more tragic.
I will think of these women the next time I visit Mont d' Huisnes cemetery. Please do the same.
Rest in peace, poor souls.
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