TLDR: If you don't want to read my commentary, just read the sections in courier text - those are the historical sources. You'll get the story, just with less context.
There are two kinds of stories from my grandparents' life during WW2 - ones they didn't talk about because it was just too painful, and ones they talked about freely.
The murder of Madame Auvergne - their landlady/babysitter/friend - is one they talked about, perhaps because it wasn't done to them by a faceless evil enemy occupier; instead it was committed by an ally, against an innocent woman and her little niece. She liked to flirt with men in uniform (including Wehrmacht uniforms), and was a supporter of the collaborationist Vichy government, but she had also sheltered and protected my grandparents and aunt, and kept their secrets.
It was an act of not-so-friendly fire, part of the reckoning France went through after the war, when rage and a national need for revenge temporarily overcame the rule of law. Even my grandpa was swept up in it, when in a case of mistaken identity, he was arrested without evidence, and held for 3 days before he was released.
The murderer was a man named Jacques Faure, and he was a résistant who served in my grandfather's own maquis unit, and someone Grandpa Arthur considered a friend. No wonder Grandpa was angry.
I've written about the event before, but new information came to light when a historian friend in France sent me a bundle of letters from the Drôme Department archives, all written in the 1940s, well before any of my other sources of information, and they include a description from someone who was there.
Yes, you read that right. I now have eyewitness testimony. I gasped aloud when I finished translating it, and I imagine that this is how a police detective must feel when she breaks a case.
So here is everything I know, in order. Red text indicates details you should remember.
Epitaphs:
Élise AUVERGNE, 46 years, died on 16 July 1944, cowardly murdered
Colette CHAVARENT, 9 years, died on 16 July 1944, cowardly murdered
Mrs. Auvergne and her niece are buried in a cemetery in Beaumont-lès-Valence. I don't know the exact date they were buried, or when the gravestones were placed, but it seems likely that they were laid to rest before any of my other sources of information.
Letter 1 - 19 Mar 1945 (new info):
I saw Mr. Méjean yesterday. He passed a word to Colonel Descours regarding the matter in which you gave testimony. He’s confident there will be no consequences.
--ROUX, Léon to Captain Jean PLANAS
I suppose this may be referring to something unrelated, and not to the murders, but either way, it had never occurred to me that Faure's actions might have impacted Grandpa's commanding officer. I mean, of course the authorities would want to know if Faure had acted alone, or if he'd been carrying out his commander's orders.
Letter 2 - 21 Feb 1947 (new info):
RE: Certification of Captain Jean PLANAS
Dr. Planas
Recently, when I had an X-ray at your place, I wanted to ask you for a written statement, and since you had a lot of people there that day, I completely forgot about it; in a nutshell, I'll explain what it's about. It's about the Jacques Faure affair.
I want to tell you that this individual is still in Beaumont. So we would need written testimony on stamped paper testifying on your role when a certain Jacques Faure acted as someone ordered to assassinate my wife and my little niece Chavarent. This would be useful to us to file a petition to the Minister of Justice for a review of the trial.
Enclosed you will find a stamped sheet of paper for the testimony and a stamp for the return.
I look forward to your response. Please accept, Mr. Planas, my sincere gratitude.
--AUVERGNE, Léon to Jean PLANAS
I took notice when I saw the signature on this letter, because Léon Auvergne was Mrs. Auvergne's husband. But what does the letter tell me? I need to distinguish between facts and implications.
The facts:
- Mr. Auvergne was Dr. Planas's patient.
- The tone of the letter was polite, even kind of chatty.
- Three years after his wife's death, he was trying to have the case reopened, hoping to bring her murderer to justice.
- Jacques Faure was from Beaumont-lès-Valence and was still living there.
The implications:
- The chatty tone suggests that Mr. Auvergne didn't blame Dr. Planas for his wife's death.
- Because the Auvergnes were patients of Dr. Planas, the events were probably horrifying for him, that a soldier under his command gunned down people he cared for in his medical practice.
According to my grandfather, most people (including the Auvergnes) had been supporters of the collaborative Vichy government early in the war. However, by the summer of 1944, Vichy had become tremendously unpopular, and people who still supported them would have been distrusted.
I grew up in a small town like Beaumont-lès-Valence, where everyone knows everyone, and gossip can and does run rampant, and I must imagine that the townspeople, even if they disagreed with the Auvergne's political beliefs, would have been hostile towards a man who drunkenly gunned down a little girl.
Planas deposition handwritten on back of letter 2 (date unclear):
I, the undersigned, Dr. Jean Planas, physician residing at Étoile, former captain attached to the 2nd Battalion, Drôme Company, hereby attest that Private Jacques Faure, who belonged to the 3rd section of the Company, was on leave on July 16, 1944. That during the attack on Madame Auvergne and her niece Chavarent, he acted spontaneously contrary to all requisitions and references: upon his return to the Company, on the morning of the 17th, Jacques Faure was taken prisoner. He was taken under arms and transferred to the headquarters to be tried there.
Dr. Planas's handwriting was difficult to read, so I can't be entirely sure that my transcription/translation is perfectly accurate, but I think that I've captured the gist. The only new info is that Faure had been in the third section (of the 4th Company, 2nd Battalion, Drôme FFI), and that he returned to HQ on July 17th.
Letter 3 - 3 Mar 1947 (new info):
Dear Doctor Planas,
Please excuse the delay in responding to your letter of the 25th, caused by the bad weather; which left us completely cut off from mail service for three days. Let me first tell you that I am particularly pleased with the result of my medical analysis, because it worries me greatly.
Now I am writing again regarding my statement about the Jacques Faure case. I must tell you that he is still here, but it seems they are planning to leave because they have rented out their house and land.
So, on the day of July 14, 1944, he came to Beaumont, to the property of Mr. Leillaret. He had a minor altercation with several boules players, especially with Mr. Jean Bellon, whose son was in the Resistance. And on July 16, 1944, he reappeared again in Beaumont and presented himself at the home of Mr. Jean Bellon, with the clear intention of killing him, since he had a revolver in his hands. Fortunately for them, they were having a family meal — a child found it very disturbing. He then went to the Les Faures neighborhood, to my home, on July 16, 1944, at 6:30 p.m., and opened fire on the whole family who were seated outside the house, having a small family snack.
--AUVERGNE, Léon to Jean PLANAS
- The Faures are leaving Beaumont, which I believe is strong evidence that the town had become a hostile place for Jacques.
- Mr. Auvergne was having health issues.
- Jacques Faure was absent from 4th company HQ from July 14-17.
- On Bastille Day, Faure appeared in Beaumont-lès-Valence, and gets into fights with the locals. He then disappears from view for two days.
- Jacques Faure shows up at the Bellon home on July 16 and threatens him with a handgun, but a crying child deters Jacques who flees the scene.
- He found the Auvergnes eating outside, and opened fire on them at 6:30pm.
Three tragic episodes disrupted the shaping of our Company: June 12, a member of the 3rd Section stole from Warrant Officer LABROSSE a Colt 45, a US Navy weapon, and went to shoot a milice volunteer in Beaumont. Unfortunately, his lack of composure made him shoot down the wife and daughter of this sinister individual who came between our comrade and his target....
--Dr. Michel PLANAS
Sometime in June, while the 4th Company was still on Ourches, Jacques Faure, one of us, went home without any authorization, got drunk and shot to death Mme. Auvergne. The Auvergnes were the owners of the old house in which my wife and child lived. She had a reputation being a friend of Germans. In fact she belonged to a family of collaborators, but the rumors of her having denounced the FFI’s (the home of one FFI has been burned by Germans who gave 5 minutes to this family to leave the house) were probably only gossip. She knew about me being in the Maquis and my wife has not been investigated. Jacques Faure’s self-handed stupid act resulted in a real danger to many families of FFI, mostly to mine. In addition, inadvertently he shot also her niece, the father of which was a POW in Germany since 1940.Captain Sanglier was very angry at Jacques. He was dispatched, under armed guard to the headquarters of Major Antoine. From now on Jacques served in a command of desperados, most of whom were killed in extremely dangerous missions, but he survived.
-- Arthur Lubinski
- The Auvergnes sheltered the Lubinskis, and despite their support of a fascist government, never betrayed them. I wonder about the nuances in their political beliefs.
- Mrs. Auvergne had a reputation of "being a friend of the Germans." Not sure exactly what that means, but I've always interpreted it as she liked men in uniform.
- Mrs. Auvergne, not her husband, was the target.
- Jacques Faure was sent to battalion (?) headquarters, and then to a group that served dangerous missions. In other words, he was intended to be cannon-fodder.
Yes, in our unit, our company was a man whose brain was not fully developed ... we say retarded.And the Germans suspected that someone was in the maquis. And they were right. And they came to Beaumont-lès-Valence and burned the farm. And the whole village, the whole town was trying to guess who denounced them. How the Germans knew it?Well, we lived in a home, you know, this seventeenth-century peasant home with no floor, with one tiny window. We lived over there. It belonged to the Auvergnes; Mr. and Mrs. Auvergne ... They were people from the right and they were … France was divided and they were for Vichy, for the government. Not for de Gaulle in London, but Vichy government which collaborated with Germans. And she was flirting with German officers, etc. And then came the suspicion that she denounced.And my retarded friend, he came through the mountains, came from the mountains and shot down Mrs. Auvergne with a pistol. Killed her. And she was keeping in her hand, her niece, whose father was a prisoner of war in Germany. And it’s a miracle that this was not Lillian because Lillian was supposed to stay with Madame Auvergne, but at the last moment, Mother left her with someone else. I don’t know what she did.But in any event, almost Lillian was killed and the man returned to the Maquis. He came without permission, he killed someone without permission, and therefore as punishment, he was sent to a company whose duties were dangerous to such an extent that his probability of survival was very remote. And nevertheless he survived.
Madame Auvergne did not denounce these people. If she had, she would have denounced me. Roma would have suffered; the child ... It was not she. And after the war – he survived the war – after the war he had to go to a court and was accused of killing someone. And the gendarme – police – came to me, to ask what I knew about it. I said, “Madame Auvergne had wrong political ideas but she did not denounce. I wouldn’t be alive.”
But true justice couldn’t exist. He was not ... He was freed … He was not condemned. He didn’t spend time in jail. Very bad.
- Jacques Faure suffered from some sort of intellectual disability (and this is possibly confirmed by Michel Planas's phrase "lack of composure"). Grandpa said he had mental retardation, but I don't know the extent of his condition.
- The Auvergnes may have been right-leaning supporters of the Vichy Government and Marshal Pétain, but they kept my family's secrets.
- My grandfather was certain that the Auvergnes hadn't been Gestapo informants (and he had good reason to think so).
- Jacques Faure went AWOL, and used a pistol (and not say a Sten submachine gun, which was very common in the FFI).
- My aunt could well have been killed, because Mrs. Auvergne was supposed to babysit her, but for some reason, my Grandma Roma kept her home, or left her with someone else. That suggests that Roma might not have been home at the time of the murders.
- My grandfather's description closely matched that of both Léon Auvergne, and that of Dr. Jean Planas, plus he knew the people involved very well, so I trust his version of the events.
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