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The Holocaust History Project.
The Holocaust History Project.

FRENCH CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST

A memorial
Serge Klarsfeld  

 
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A CHRONOLOGY OF MAJOR EVENTS
IN THE WAR AGAINST THE JEWS
AND THE DEPORTATIONS OF
JEWISH CHILDREN FROM FRANCE
1940


The first anti-Semitic measures taken by the Vichy regime came within a week of the new government's formation on July 11, 1940. Although the regulations were nationalist in nature and did not single out Jews, they affected Jews more than any other group and began the process of eliminating them from positions of influence and isolating them from French society. The regulations and the attitudes they fostered among Vichy officials led inexorably to the deportations and murders first of Jewish adults and then of Jewish children, some of them infants.

July 17, 1940. Vichy government regulations limit Civil Service employment to per sons whose fathers are French. The regulations are not limited to Jews, but Jews are nevertheless a large proportion of those affected by the regulations.

July 22, 1940. The Vichy Ministry of Justice is ordered to form a commission to review all citizenships granted under France's 1927 naturalization law and decide whether they should be revoked. (Of the 18,000 denaturalizations ordered during the Vichy years, a little more than 7,000 affected Jewish citizens.)

August 16, 1940. Vichy regulations creating a Doctors Guild limit the practice of medicine to persons born of French fathers.

August 27, 1940. The 1939 Marchandeau Law banning anti-Semitic articles in the French press is revoked.

September 3, 1940. Prefects are given the authority to intern all persons deemed threats to national security.

September 10, 1940. Vichy establishes a Lawyers Guild and limits the practice of law to persons whose fathers are French.

September 27, 1940. German military administration regulations define a Jew as any person who now or ever has professed the Jewish religion or who has more than two Jewish grandparents. The regulations order a census of Jews in the Occupied Zone, the stamping of the words "Juif' or "Juive" on their identity cards, and the posting of placards identifying Jewish-owned shops and businesses. (The stamping of the word "Jew" on identity cards was not imposed in the Unoccupied Zone until after the Germans occupied all of France in November 1942. A Vichy decree issued December 11, 1942, required the stamp on Jews' identity cards and food rationing cards.)
 


   
   

FRENCH CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST

A memorial
Serge Klarsfeld

 
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