
Last survivor of french war massacre village oradour-sur-glane dies
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The death of Robert Hébras marks the turning of a page of history, a page which he never stopped recounting throughout his long life: about the village that still remains a living monument
to death. The Limousin village in which he was born. Things changed forever the day the Waffen SS entered Oradour-sur-Glane, on June 10, 1944. The summary brutality they meted out was
exceptional even by their own standards. "I was in front of my door with a friend, we were just chatting about things. It was 14:00 when we heard the sound of caterpillar tracks from
the back of the village. We looked over and saw two-tracked vehicles trundling past us, packed with soldiers." SHOT THEN BURNED The teenager found himself with his mother and his two
sisters being frog marched onto the village square before being separated from them. The young Mr Hébras and dozens of the men from Oradour were herded into one of the village’s several
barns. "The two machine guns were set up in front of us. The chief gave the order to fire. There were about 50 of us, the first ones were ten metres from the weapons. We fell on top of
each other. “Then they covered us with everything that could burn and set fire to us. When the flames started to reach me, I had no choice: either I would die burned alive or I would try to
run away. I got out from under the dead and dying, the soldiers were no longer there. I was able to take refuge in a stable." ‘I CAN’T CRY ANY MORE’ "I saw young girls crying while
listening to my story. It hurt my heart. I don't cry anymore. I can't cry anymore. I've cried too much," he said towards the end of his life. His death was announced in
a statement by his family, Philippe Lacroix, the mayor of Oradour-sur-Glane, and Benoît Sadry, president of the National Association of the Families of the Martyrs of Oradour-sur-Glane.
Robert Hébras was born on June 29, 1925 in Oradour-sur-Glane (Haute-Vienne) and was the last survivor of the massacre that claimed 643 lives This included 260 children, 68 of whom were under
6 years old, who burned in the church along with their mothers and the other womenfolk of the village. Many tributes have been made for him including from the President of the Haute-Vienne
department. > Avec La mort de Robert Hebras, c’est toute une histoire tragique > qui est dans nos mémoires collectives. Je rend hommage à ce grand > Homme qui a consacré toute sa
vie à perpétuer le souvenir > d’#Oradour et à défendre les valeurs de fraternité. #CMO > pic.twitter.com/h5F5pb6Ohx > — Jean-Claude Leblois (@LebloisJC) February 11, 2023 READ MORE:
VILLAGE WHERE TIME HAS STOOD STILL SINCE NAZI ATROCITY Mr Hébras was 18 when the Der Führer regiment of the Waffen-SS Panzerdivision Das Reich struck. The village’s men were corralled into
barns and the women and children into the church. For young Robert, it was the Laudy barn, under the guard of a detachment with machine guns. History records that after an hour's
waiting, the firing squad opened up. They were piled up and then inspected before the wounded were shot and the building set alight. Only six wounded survived, hidden under the pile of
corpses, according to _Le Monde_. WOMEN AND CHILDREN BURNED ALIVE IN CHURCH The young mechanic's apprentice, shot in the chest, leg and arm, managed to crawl out of the barn. He would
have preferred, he later explained, to be shot with a bullet than to die by fire. He managed to escape the SS patrols and reach a nearby hamlet. There he learned that his mother and two of
his sisters, Georgette and Denise, had been burned in the church. His father and his third sister, who were not in the village that day, had escaped the massacre. “The survivor then joined
the maquis, then the army to take part in the fighting during the Liberation. After the war, he went back to work, opened his own garage, started a family, had a son and three grandchildren.
It was then that he began the ‘work of memory’ that he would carry out for the rest of his life,” reads an obituary in _Le Monde_. COURT WITNESS As a survivor, he testified at the trial
before the Bordeaux military tribunal, from January 12 to February 12, 1953, of 23 ex-SS (nine Germans and 14 Alsatians). Two death sentences (including that of an Alsatian) were handed
down, while one German was acquitted, and the others were sentenced to five to ten years of hard labour. The following week, "in the interests of national cohesion,” the French
Parliament voted for an amnesty for the convicted Alsatians. This vote aroused two antagonistic groups, and a lasting dispute between Limousin and Alsace. Mr Hébras was himself a victim of
this. In 2012, the republication of his book _Oradour-sur-Glane. Le drame par heure_ (_Chemins de la mémoire_ 1992), in which he evoked those who were "supposedly forced into the SS
units," led to a complaint by the Alsatian Associations of escapees and draftees. HATE VICTIM The Court of Appeal of Colmar sentenced the author to €1 in damages for defamation and
€10,000 in legal costs. On October 16, 2013, the Court of Cassation overturned the conviction on the grounds that these remarks "did not exceed the limits of freedom of
expression." This did not spare him the vindictiveness of revisionist historians and anonymous death threats. At the same time, Mr Hébras had given himself a more ambitious objective
than that of witness: to work for Franco-German reconciliation from the village, whose ruins, preserved in their original state, are the most visited place in the Limousin (300,000 visitors
per year, according to the regional tourist office). They are especially popular with German schoolchildren and students, for whom he was an attentive guide. In 1983, he attended the trial
and sentencing (life imprisonment, released for health reasons in 1997) of one of the organisers of the massacre, Heinz Barth, who was living under a false identity in the former German
Democratic Republic. He then returned several times to give lectures at German universities. HEAPED WITH HONOURS Mr Hébras was a Chevalier (knight), then officer of the Légion d'honneur
(2001), holder of the Austrian Holocaust Remembrance Prize (2008), holder of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (2012), and in 2013 he was visited by President of the
Federal Republic Joachim Gauck, accompanied by the then French President, François Hollande. And on June 10, 2017, he welcomed Emmanuel Macron on the occasion of the 73rd anniversary of the
massacre. During his long lifetime, Mr Hébras published several books. In addition to _Le Drame heure par heure_, There was _Avant que ma voix ne s'éteigne_ (_Before My Voice Falls
Silent_ with the journalist Laurent Borderie, Elytel, 2014). He also participated in several documentary films, including _Une vie avec Oradour_, by Patrick Séraudie (2011), and _Der Fall
Oradour, Enquête sur un crime de guerre_, by Ute Casper (2014). ROBERT HÉBRAS, IN BRIEF * June 29, 1925: Born in Oradour-sur-Glane (Haute-Vienne) * June 10, 1944: Escaped the massacre *
1992: Publishes _Oradour-sur-Glane. Le drame par heure_ (Chemins de la mémoire) * 2014: Publishes _Avant que ma voix ne s'éteigne_ (Elytel) * 2023: Died in Saint-Junien (Haute-Vienne)
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RECOGNITION