European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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Then we were taken to a kangaroo court in Rouen.
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We knew they would never let us go, but we did not know what was going to happen after imprisonment.
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I knew the risk I was taking. But to be able to hide you needed a place to do so.
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Many people were not ready to put us up, even if they were friends. They were scared of the police, of being arrested as well.
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It was very difficult, so I stayed with my parents.
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When I’d come home my father would give me a beating.
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I didn’t have the possibility to hide. I was getting ready to do so.
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But I was arrested two or three weeks before I was about to leave and really go undercover.
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Semi-clandestine activities 1939-41
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The reason we distributed these leaflets was to alert the population and the workers in the factories.
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We distributed leaflets in front of the factories and in different neighborhoods.
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Often we would do that at night. But at night there were also police patrols.
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So there would be two or three of us to distribute the leaflets and two or three to watch out for the police.
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We had to be very careful.
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We took many precautions: we’d hide the material to make the leaflets at someone’s place, the paper with somebody else.
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We’d try to distribute them at night, to escape from the police.
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But the police was there at night as well.
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We also handed out leaflets at the gates of the factories, even though we were quite visible there.
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We took precautions there as well. One of us would be on the look out for the police.
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We’d leave around two or three o’clock in the morning to distribute the leaflets.
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