Two Tales from Wartime Paris

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Two Tales from Wartime Paris
This year’s VE Day commemoration, marked as always with a public holiday, a ceremony at the Arc de Triomphe and moving events in towns and villages all over France, seemed especially poignant. It is exactly 80 years since the end of World War II in Europe and each year, fewer and fewer of those whom the French Ministry of Defense referred to as “the last surviving witnesses of the war” are in attendance.  We must accept that soon, there will be none at all. We will have to rely on the memories they have written down or recorded to understand what happened and what life in those turbulent times was like for ordinary citizens.    Two recently published books, based on true stories from the period and both set mainly, although not exclusively, in Paris, add much to our understanding. The Paris Girl by Francelle Bradford White tells the story of Andrée, just 19 when war broke out, who was gradually drawn into a Resistance group, eventually playing such a key role that she would be awarded two of France’s highest honours, the Croix de Guerre and the Légion d’Honneur.  Star Crossed by Heather Dune Macadam and Simon Worrall focuses on the love between two young people, one Jewish, one Catholic, during the Nazi occupation, a relationship set against family opposition and the horrors of persecution.  Both books provide much fascinating period detail and both tell gripping human stories.       The Paris Girl  In May 1939, 19-year-old Andrée Griotteray started work at the Préfecture de Police in Paris. A year later, as Paris was occupied, German officers took over the building and she began small acts of defiance which gradually turned into a full-blown involvement in a resistance network. The teenager who had written an excited diary entry in May 1940 describing her “beautiful new hat … a stunning navy-blue color,” was, on September 15th that year expressing her disgust at seeing German soldiers all over Paris and writing resolutely that “Hitler has to be stopped.” This book, written by her daughter Francelle, tells the remarkable story of Andrée’s war, based on the diaries she kept, on her later reminiscences and on Francelle’s in-depth research in French archives and interviews with people who lived through the events alongside her mother.    “The Paris Girl.” Andrée Griotteray aged approx. twenty-six – Author’s Personal Collection Andrée began by stealing blank ID cards from her office, already a risky act given that it was full of German officials. They could be handed on to Jews and others trying to flee Paris. Soon, she was helping her brother Alain by going into work early and typing up material for the underground newspaper, La France, which he had founded and taking dictation from Resistance sources over the phone, typing it up and delivering it to secret drop-off points. Descriptions of her slipping clandestine material out of her typewriter when German officers passed through her office and politely refusing their invitations to dinner reveal her sang-froid, something which was later to save her life.
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Lead photo credit : "The Paris Girl." Dance at the British Officers Club, Place Vendôme, 1945 - the night Andrée met her future husband Frank White - Author's Personal Collection

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After a career teaching Modern Languages (French and German), Marian turned to freelance writing and is now a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers, specializing in all things French and – especially! – Parisian. She’s in Paris as often as possible, visiting places old and new, finding out their stories and writing it all up as soon as she gets home. She also runs the podcast series City Breaks, offering in-depth coverage of popular city break destinations, with lots of background history and cultural information. The Paris series currently has 22 episodes, but more will surely follow when time allows!

Comments

  • Joanne Baer
    2025-08-29 09:45:37
    Joanne Baer
    Your articles are superb..love reading them. Joanne

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    • Marian Jones
      2025-11-02 07:02:39
      Marian Jones
      Merci, Joanne. Que ça continue! (Long may it continue!)

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