Timeline

(Based on Ian Ousby, Occupation: The Ordeal of France, 1940-1944 (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998)

 

1940
13 May Germany invades France
14 June The German army marches into Paris
16 June The head of the French government resigns and is replaced by Maréchal Pétain, a World War I hero
22 June Franco-German armistice signed
10 July The Vichy régime is established with Pétain as head of State in unoccupied France; the French Third Republic is abolished
3-4 October The Vichy government decrees the first of its statutes against Jews. Jews are barred from public office; a law is passed allowing the internment of Jews in camps
1941
14 May First roundup of Jews in Paris
June Second statute against Jews decreed; only 3% of Jewish students are allowed to attend university
22 July Vichy law allows the confiscation of Jewish property
20 August The camp at Drancy is opened
5 September The anti-Semitic exhibition “The Jews of France” opens in Paris
2-3 October Seven Paris synagogues are blown up by right-wing French extremists
1942
20 January German government works out the “final solution” in Berlin, sealing the death warrant of European Jews
27 March The first trainload of Jews leaves Drancy for Auschwitz
19 May Jews over the age of 6 in the Occupied Zone are required to wear the yellow star
8 July Jews are forbidden to frequent any public establishment: restaurants, cafés, theaters, cinemas, concerts, phone booths, markets, swimming pools, beaches, museums, libraries, chateaux, sports events, camping grounds, parks, etc.
16-17 July Massive roundups of Jews in Paris; massive deportations
23 August A pastoral letter by Archbishop Saliège of Toulouse condemns the deportations of Jews; as a result of French public opinion, the process of deportation is slowed
1943
Massive roundups and deportations of Jews from Rouen, Marseille and the Côte d’Azur as well as Paris
1944
6 April Klaus Barbie raids the children’s home at Izieu, where Jewish children had found refuge
17 August The last trainload of Jews leaves France for Auschwitz
24-26 August Paris is liberated; De Gaulle leads the victory parade from the Arc de Triomphe to Notre Dame

* Based on Ian Ousby, Occupation: The Ordeal of France, 1940-1944 (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998)