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[ Press WW2 39-45] " Franc Tireur " #256 27 April 1945 Eo Buchenwald Photo

$ 297.86

Availability: 58 in stock
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Europa
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • subject: Histoire, Politics
  • country of manufacture: France
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Type: Journal, Bulletin
  • Condition: Used
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Number of pages: 2
  • Object modified: Non
  • Age: Second Guerre World

    Description

    [WW2 PRESS - 39/45]
    Maverick
    At the vanguard of the Republic
    Rare!
    5th year - N ° 256
    Friday April 27, 1945
    -
    First Printing
    Original Edition
    Small In-Folio, (approximately 43.5 x 29cm), 2pp.
    (1 sheet printed on both sides)
    This issue contains a startling, unbearable and
    famous photography
    of a deportee.
    This photograph has become an unforgettable, haunting and
    unmissable
    , absolute symbol
    suffering
    deportees
    in the Nazi concentration camps
    It was taken around April 12 during the liberation of the Buchenwald camp
    And was published anonymously (as is often the case with press photos)
    for the first time
    "on the front page" of this issue of Franc-Tireur.
    The original of the photograph was found quite recently in the AFP archives,
    and this could be attributed definitively and with certainty to Eric SCHWAB.
    Eric Schwab
    French photographer
    Photojournalist, war photographer, resistance fighter, photographer
    Worked for
    UNESCO, World Health Organization, Agence France-Presse, Stern
    Éric Schwab, is a French photographer, photojournalist and war correspondent,
    born September 5, 1910 in Hamburg and died in 1977.
    He notably worked for Agence France-Presse (AFP) and for several organizations
    United Nations such as the World Health Organization and Unesco.
    Biography
    In 1939, Eric Schwab, former reporter, cinema and fashion photographer in Paris, carried out his military service.
    After the battle of Dunkirk in June 1940, he was imprisoned by the Germans.
    He escapes after a few weeks and returns to Paris.
    Struck by the anti-Semitic laws of Vichy, he can no longer exercise his profession as a photographer. He then went underground and joined the French Internal Resistance.
    After the liberation of Paris, he worked for Agence France-Presse as a correspondent
    from September 1944.
    Accredited with the American army, he became a war correspondent and
    follows the advance of Allied troops through Germany from November 1944 to May 1945.
    His first known photos are those taken in the Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps.
    With Meyer Levin, a journalist for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, “They were among
    the very first to discover the living dead in striped uniforms
    ,
    the piled up corpses,
    the pestilential smell of mass graves ”.
    Eric Schwab is looking for his mother Elsbeth who was living in Berlin when she was deported, and whom he has not heard from since 1943. He ends up finding her at the Theresienstadt camp.
    She escaped death and cares for surviving children
    Many photos of Schwab were shown in June 1945 as part of the exhibition
    Hitlerite crimes at the Grand Palais in Paris, and reproduced in the press around the world, but rarely credited to their author as was the custom at that time.
    In 1946, Eric Schwab moved to New York with his wife, a French psychotherapist.
    In 1947, their daughter, Corinne, was born.
    Passionate about jazz, he photographs the big names of Harlem clubs for Look, Life and Stern,
    and continued to collaborate with AFP until the early fifties.
    He then worked in various United Nations organizations, including the World Health Organization, UNESCO and the German magazine Stern.
    Two photographs by Eric Schwab are selected for the photographic exhibition
    The Family of Man
    at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1955.
    Eric Schwab died in 1977 in France at the age of 67.
    His daughter Corinne, known as Coco Schwab, was the personal assistant for forty-three years.
    and very close friend of singer David Bowie.
    -
    Newspaper
    yellowed
    like always
    copy folded in 2, depending on the numbers may have various folds and small tears,
    folds on folds and edges, small holes, etc ...
    Fair condition, clean
    cf. visuals ...
    Not found
    document !!
    Sold as described, as found
    "Franc-Tireur"
    Franc-Tireur is a resistance movement founded in Lyon in November 1940 under the name “France Liberté”, renamed “Franc-Tireur” in December 1941 on the proposal of Jean-Jacques Soudeille.
    The leader of the movement was Jean-Pierre Lévy.
    Le Franc-Tireur is also the name of the underground journal of the movement, which went through thirty-seven issues from December 1941 to August 1944.
    Under the aegis of Jean Moulin, the movement will merge with Liberation-Sud and Combat to form the United Movements of the Resistance (MUR).
    Franc-Tireur is the movement in the southern zone that has the most Lyon ties. Founded in 1941 by a group of men from various backgrounds, it is a movement bringing together personalities with the same political sensibility, an opposition to the armistice and, from the start, to Marshal Pétain himself.
    Birth and early days
    The initiators of the movement meet at home or during card games at the “Moulin Joli” café, place des Terreaux. The first members are Antoine Avinin, member of JEUNE République and left Catholic, Auguste Pinton, former municipal councilor, Élie Péju and Jean-Jacques Soudeille,
    former communists turned radical.
    They and a few others regroup and at the end of November 1940 founded a movement which they called
    "France-Liberté" whose goal is to fight against government propaganda and to mobilize against defeat and the authoritarian order that is being established. The group begins by writing leaflets against the Nazis and Pétain which, for lack of resources, are limited to small numbers of hand-typed copies.
    Jean-Pierre Lévy and the birth of the newspaper
    The group took off for the first time with the arrival of Jean-Pierre Lévy, an Alsatian refugee who brought a mimeo in the spring of 1941 and launched the idea of ​​growing in its dissemination force by publishing a real newspaper.
    With the support of the printer Henri Chevalier, the first copy was released in December 1941 in 6000 copies. It is printed on four pages in size 21 by 27.5 cm. The title of Franc-Tireur is an allusion to the groups of volunteers who were formed in 1870 outside the legal framework to defend the homeland and the Republic. The tone is humorous and offensive against the Marshal and the Germans. The defended themes are the opposition to the new order and the occupier, the denunciation of these misdeeds, the call for resistance of all goodwill. The conclusion of its number 1 is "A single task is imperative: resist, organize".
    Movement development
    The group becomes a movement which seeks to act more than simply by the weapons of the spirit. Jean-Pierre Lévy thus made contact with emissaries from London such as Léon Morandat and the leaders of other movements. Having as a commercial framework profession, Lévy has a cover to circulate and he creates branches in the Rhône-Alpes region, and more generally wherever he has solid relations. He was heavily helped by his family, such as his sister and his brother-in-law, who established the movement in Roanne. Quickly, the movement took shape in the Loire, the Mediterranean coast, Cantal and, more slightly, in Languedoc-Roussillon and the Toulouse region.
    Journal extension
    Quickly, at the head of the newspaper is found a tradesman, Georges Altman, journalist of the Progress. He is effectively assisted by Élie Péju. The journal is improving to become a regular and professional organ for disseminating ideas. Its printing places are multiplying: Lyon, Saint-Étienne, Morez, Albi, Bordeaux, Valence, etc. After the offices were set up at no 19 boulevard de Sébastopol in Paris, in August 1943, the newspaper was printed there from February 1944. The circulation increased steadily, from 15,000 in April 1942 to 30,000 in November, then 100,000 in September 1943 and 150,000 copies in August 1944.
    The tone of the newspaper is very offensive, as much towards the Germans as against the men of Vichy.
    Very early on, the fate of the Jews was denounced, in particular with a leaflet produced in August 1942 to protest
    against the Vél 'd'Hiv' roundup and an article from February 1944 detailing the Nazi concentration camps.
    Conversely, democracy and the republican regime are defended in each issue. The team, through the newspaper, encourages the population to come together for each commemorative event and thus express their opposition to the situation; whether it's July 14 or November 11.
    The newspaper has a very stable editorial team, but from time to time welcomes outside pens such as Jean Nocher, Albert Bayet or Marc Bloch (executed by the Gestapo on June 16, 1944), the latter two eventually becoming full members. movement.
    Military actions
    In 1942, the movement decided not to be content with words and organized sabotage actions,
    hiding places of fugitives or information.
    They stand out in particular by an important coordinated action in November 1942 in Lyon,
    Clermont-Ferrand, Roanne, Limoges, Périgueux and Vichy. In December 1942, they managed to do major damage in the France-Rayonne factory. From the summer of 1942, Jean-Pierre Lévy and his contacts in Grenoble Léon Martin and Aimé Pupin began to organize hideouts in Isère to hide young people.
    who refuse to go to Germany.
    Franc-Tireur was created in Lyon in December 1941, by a group made up of Élie Péju (former member of Humanity),
    Georges Altman, Marc Bloch and Yves Farges (known as “Grégoire”). It was illegally printed in Lyon, rue Vieille Monnaie,
    by Eugène Pons (the latter was deported and died in Neuengamme, Germany).
    Franc-Tireur was one of the
    most influential among the underground dailies born of the Resistance
    : he gave his support to General de Gaulle and
    chaired the permanent office of the National Federation
    of the underground press (created in November 1943).
    In 1945,
    Franc-Tireur moved into the former L'Intransigeant printing press, located at 100, rue Réaumur, Paris-IIe.
    Daily morning, its edition successively amounted to 60,000 copies (1941), 150,000 (1942), 165,000 (1944),
    182,000 (1945), 350,000 (1947) and 370,000 (1948).
    Its motto was "Franc-Tireur is not the newspaper of a Party, it is a
    newspaper which takes sides ”. In October 1948, a split occurred within the management committee, part of which
    of the members wanted a political orientation more to the left: the opponents, who had resigned, entered
    Release. On November 18, 1957, Franc-Tireur was bought by Cino del Duca, publisher specializing in the press of the heart
    ; it changed its title to henceforth call itself Paris-Journal.
    The following year, Péju and Altman, founders of FrancTireur, resigned.
    To be continued on ebay ...
    other periodical journals and rare documents from the same source will be sold soon
    concerning the Press at the Liberation of Paris in 1944, the Capitulation of Germany in 1945 and the end of World War II, and also
    concerning before and after the war
    -
    As always, you can request the combined shipping costs if you buy several books or documents ...
    With the support of the printer Henri Chevalier, the first copy was released in December 1941 in 6000 copies. It is printed on four pages in size 21 by 27.5 cm. The title of Franc-Tireur is an allusion to the groups of volunteers who were formed in 1870 outside the legal framework to defend the homeland and the Republic. The tone is humorous and offensive against the Marshal and the Germans. The defended themes are the opposition to the new order and the occupier, the denunciation of these misdeeds, the call for resistance of all goodwill. The conclusion of its number 1 is "A single task is imperative: resist, organize". The group becomes a movement which seeks to act more than simply by the weapons of the spirit. Jean-Pierre Lévy thus made contact with emissaries from London such as Léon