Lieu de Mémoire au Chambon-sur-Lignon

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/institutions/fr-006281 an entity of type: CorporateBody

Lieu de Mémoire au Chambon-sur-Lignon 
With the leadership of local minister André Trocmé and his deputy pastor Edouard Theis, the citizens of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon risked their lives to hide Jews who were being rounded up by the Nazis and the collaborationist Vichy regime and sent to the death camps. They hid the Jews in private homes, on farms in the area, as well as in public institutions. Whenever the Nazi patrols came searching, the Jews were hidden in the mountainous countryside. In 1981 the entire town was awarded an honorary degree by Haverford College in Pennsylvania in recognition of its humanitarian efforts. In 1982, documentary filmmaker Pierre Sauvage—who was born and sheltered in Le Chambon—returned there to film Weapons of the Spirit (1989). In 1990, for their humanitarianism and bravery under extreme danger, the entire town was recognized as"Righteous Among the Nation". A small garden and plaque on the grounds of the Yad Vashem memorial to the Holocaust in Israel was dedicated to the people of Chambon-sur-Lignon. In 2004 French President Jacques Chirac officially recognized the heroism of the town. The Pont-de-Mars Castle in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon. In January 2007 they were honored along with the other French Righteous Among the Nations in a ceremony at the Panthéon in Paris. 
ldm.chambon@memorialdelashoah.org 
+33 (0)4 71 56 56 65 
Fonds and archival material are stocked at the municipal archive and other partner institutions.  

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