Petit Claude: The Orphan of Auschwitz

and His French Rescuers

by Agnes Holzapfel Seugnet


Formats

Softcover
$20.55
Hardcover
$29.90
E-Book
$13.95
Softcover
$20.55

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 26/04/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 217
ISBN : 9780738860695
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 217
ISBN : 9780738860688
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 217
ISBN : 9781465315564

About the Book

Petit Claude, The Orphan of Auschwitz is the poignant, but also heartlifting true story of a little Jewish boy who was rescued from a Nazi prison and then sheltered in the home of a young French Christian couple. Little Claude Blum - Petit Claude, as he was called then - would never forget his fourth birthday. September 14, 1942 was engraved upon his memory, not because it was celebrated by candles to blow out and wish on, but because that was the day the Gestapo took his beloved mother from the prison at the demarcation line, where they both had been incarcerated, and sent her in a cattle car to Drancy and then to the death camp at Auschwitz. His father was not “deported” until later, but he also died in the same concentration camp - ironically, just days before the camp was liberated in 1945.

But this was not the end of Petit Claude’s story. By a near-miracle, the child was rescued from the prison and spirited away to the south of France, where he was welcomed into the household of a newlywed Christian couple, both still young medical students. The story is told by one of the daughters of this heroic couple. While it goes back to tell of the prewar persecutions of the Blum family, this is essentially the account of how these two families - one Christian and one Jewish - closely linked by their concern for one little boy, lived during the dark years of the German occupation of France.

Lisette and Ernest Holzapfel, Petit Claude’s new “parents,” were already at some risk, as Ernest, who had fled Germany because of his anti-Nazi convictions, was considered an enemy alien in Vichy France despite his having served in the French Foreign Legion. Taking a Jewish child into their home was extremely dangerous, but they never hesitated. Soon Petit Claude, a bright, courageous and affectionate little boy, had totally won their hearts, and they considered him truly their own child. But, at the end of the war, Petit Claude’s grandmother, came to find him and took him with her to live in the country which would soon become Israel.

The parting was heart-wrenching. Petit Claude had come to love Lisette and Ernest deeply, and had known his first real security and happiness with them. And for Lisette, his leaving was a wound that refused to heal. Claude’s new life in Israel was difficult. His grandmother, though kind and loving, had lived since the war in circumstances so trying that she could not bring up her grandson herself. So Petit Claude, who had quickly become attached to his grandparents, his “real” family, had to leave and go to live in a kibbutz. Thus he was uprooted a third time. He spent twelve long years in the kibbutz, where he took a Hebrew forename; no longer Claude, he became Uri Blum. Contact with his French benefactors was gradually lost. It was not until nearly fifty years later that the author finally found her long-lost “big brother” and arranged for him to come for a joyous reunion with Lisette and Ernest in Lyon. Claude/Uri is today, of course, a grown man, with a wife and two grown sons, and a successful career in banking.

In addition to Petit Claude’s story, the author tells of the wartime experiences of Lisette and Ernest, and also of Claude’s family. Lisette and Ernest joined the resistance movement: Ernest became an underground member of General Charles de Gaulle’s Free French Forces, which were working with the help of the Allies to overthrow Germany. Those of Claude’s relatives who were not deported to die in Hitler’s concentration camps, spent the war years in flight and hiding, always in terrible anxiety and danger. Marshal Pétain and some of the infamous collaborators responsible for the deportation and death of thousands of French Jews appear in this account, as well as sadistic Nazi officials like Klaus Barbie. There are heroic figures, too. And the author also describes the experiences of Ernest’s brothers, who had remained in Germany, and fought in the armed forces of Hitler’s Thi


About the Author

Agnès Holzapfel Seugnet, author, painter, and educator, is uniquely qualified to write the story of Petit Claude, as she is the daughter of the heroic couple who sheltered him during the years of Nazi occupation of France. Today a plaque in the Garden of the Righteous in Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, bears the names of her parents, honoring them for their rescue of Uri (Petit Claude) Blum. Born in France, Ms. Seugnet received her MA from the Sorbonne University in Paris. She has lived in France, and in the USA. Ann Keay Beneduce is a well-known editor, and writer, as well as a translator. She has translated a number of art books from French into English.