Tablet Magazine The dust jacket of the upcoming American edition of Village of Secrets,
a new book by British author Caroline Moorehead—recently short-listed
for the Samuel Johnson Prize, the richest and most prestigious award for
nonfiction in the United Kingdom—claims that the book “sets the record
straight” about what happened in and around the French village of Le
Chambon-sur-Lignon during the Nazi occupation. Village of Secrets was recently published in the U.K. and in Canada, receiving rave reviews and making appearances on best-seller lists. (It was published in the United States by HarperCollins this week.) Publishers Weekly hailed it as “deeply researched” and “the definitive account” of the rescue effort, while Kirkus Reviews
has praised the author’s “knowledge of the people, the area and the
history,” saying that it made the book “one of the most engrossing
survival stories of World War II.” [...]
Moorehead concedes, as part of her concluding statement, that the pastor of Le Chambon and his family deserve “much honor” for the rescue effort. But, she quickly adds, no more than “all the modest Catholics, Protestants, atheists and agnostics” who joined in. [...]
That there are indeed tensions on the plateau
becomes obvious to anybody who visits there and discusses local
history. It is certainly true that many Jews did indeed find shelter
here and there throughout the small Protestant enclave. (My parents
themselves rented a room in a hamlet on the outskirts of Le Chambon.)
There may well have been a few atheists and agnostics too on what was
then known as the Protestant mountain, and it is possible that some of
them may have joined in the rescue effort—though they have not been
identified as yet by Moorehead or anybody else. And yes, some Catholics
in the area were also admirably active in rescue; Moorehead specifically
cites just one such rescuer, Marguerite Roussel—whose existence the
author happens to have learned about from the very film she attacks.
But to equate Catholic, atheist, and agnostic efforts with the role
of pastor André Trocmé and the role of the other Protestant pastors of
the area and the role of the French Protestant population as a whole is
to deny what virtually every single Jew who went through there then
would tell you: That this was fundamentally a Huguenot undertaking,
centered in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, and deriving much of its initial
momentum and energy from the pastors of Le Chambon, André Trocmé and
Édouard Theis—and their historic call to resist through the “weapons of
the spirit. [,,,]
Of course, Moorehead is entitled to disagree
with me as well as with virtually all the people who experienced that
time in Le Chambon. Unfortunately, she does so in a book that is riddled
with mistakes and distortions ranging from the relatively trivial to
the major for a book with claims to historical scholarship by an author
who allegedly drew on “unprecedented access” to unspecified “newly
opened archives in France, Britain, and Germany.” Even the photograph on
the cover of the book, under the title Village of Secrets, is not of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon! The stand-in is the tiny village of Borée, miles away. [...]
My father and his brothers were saved by a villager in Le Chambon. A Catholic villager.
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