Lawsuit of the Palate-Bourbon
The lawsuit of the Palate-Bourbon took place in March 1942. It concerned seven combatants of the Bataillons of Youth. The military governor in France, Karl-Heinrich von Stülpnagel decided to give a great repercussion to this lawsuit by making some a lawsuit with large spectacle.
The Nazis reproach the group for having made in three months more than seventeen operations of war.
The seven shown, Roger Hanlet, Acher Semhaya, Robert Peltier, Christian Rizo, Tony Bloncourt, Pierre Milan, Fernand Zalkinov are condemned to died and are shot the March 9th 1942 with the Mont Valérien.
March 9th, 2000, a solemn homage of the Nation their was paid and a plate commemorating the sacrifice of these resistant was affixed on the frontage of the Hotel of Lassay, with intitaitive of Laurent Fabius, president of the National Assembly.
Sources
- Albert Ouzoulias, Battalions of Youth , Social Editions, 1972. ISBN 2209053722
External bond
- Arrests and lawsuit of the Palate-Bourbon
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