"Tireless smuggler of memory", "craftsman of peace and reconciliation", Robert Hébras died on Saturday February 11 at the age of 97.

He was the last survivor of the massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane (Haute-Vienne), committed during the Second World War,

He died at the Saint-Junien hospital, about ten kilometers from Oradour-sur-Glane, "surrounded by his relatives", announced his family, the town hall and the association of the families of the martyrs of 'Oradour-sur-Glane in a press release.

President Emmanuel Macron hailed on Twitter the memory of a "survivor" who "devoted his life to transmitting the memory of the victims, to working for peace and reconciliation", while Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne spoke of "a tireless memory carrier".

It is with deep sadness that I learn of the death of Robert Hébras, the last survivor of Oradour-sur-Glane and a tireless transmitter of memory.



For the 643 victims of this despicable crime, for all those who lived through Nazi barbarism, we will never forget.

pic.twitter.com/Jht4kGGHBd

— Elisabeth BORNE (@Elisabeth_Borne) February 11, 2023

"It is up to us to convey his message, the one he entrusted to me in September 2013 with the German President: never forget and defend peace, Europe and democracy", also reacted former President François Holland.

Robert Hébras was about to be 19 when on June 10, 1944, the SS of the Das Reich division killed 643 people in this village in Limousin, one of the worst massacres of civilians committed by the Nazis in Western Europe.

That afternoon, "the Germans get out of their truck, tell the population to gather in the central square. For about three quarters of an hour, no one worries. The men are then separated from the women and children", said again with precision, in 2020, Robert Hébras to an AFP correspondent.

Among the victims, "the youngest was a week old, the oldest, 90 years old".

In barns, soldiers shoot men with machine guns, before burning them.

In the church, they lock up women and children and set fire.

Then they burn the bodies, dig graves and set fire to the entire village.

Only six inhabitants escaped this massacre.

Hidden under the corpses of his comrades in a barn, Robert Hébras managed to escape.

Convinced European 

This killing was "meticulously prepared and executed" by the Nazis, who wanted to "sow terror so that the population does not switch to the side of the maquis", particularly active in Limousin, explains the president of the National Association of Martyr Families. 'Oradour-sur-Glane Benoît Sadry.

"My son, I never wanted to talk about Oradour with him, except when he was 20, when he went to the army," said Robert Hébras.

After many years of walling in silence, the man fought "so that we do not forget", tirelessly telling his story, especially to schoolchildren. 

"I did what I had to do", summed up this 95-year-old former mechanic, to whom President Emmanuel Macron had presented the insignia of Commander of the National Order of Merit in 2022. 

"Convinced and committed European" according to his family, decorated with the Legion of Honor, then the German Order of Merit in 2012, Robert Hébras had guided French and German President François Hollande and Joachim Gauck in the ruins of the village in 2013. martyr.

He had testified for the first time at the trial of the massacre, organized in Bordeaux in 1953, which resulted in the conviction of seven Germans and fourteen Alsatians incorporated into the SS, the "Despite us". 

Fight for the memory of the martyr village 

The amnesty for these 14 soldiers, voted the same year by Parliament, provoked a long war of memories between Limousins ​​and Alsatians, which indirectly affected Robert Hébras years later.

In 2012, he was sentenced for defamation for having expressed, in a book, doubts about the forced enlistment of "despite us" in the Waffen SS, before being definitively cleared a year later by the Court of Cassation.

Over the past few years, Robert Hébras had passed on his memory work to his granddaughter Agathe Hébras, with whom he had written a book on the history of Oradour-sur-Glane.

The president of the Haute-Vienne department council, Jean-Claude Leblois, and the president of the Oradour memory center, Fabrice Escure, praised on Saturday "his fight for the recognition and memory of the martyr village and its 643 victims. ."

Robert Hébras died just before the 70th anniversary of the verdict of the Bordeaux trial, which fell on the night of February 12 to 13, 1953.

With AFP

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