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Love and War in the Pyrenees

A Story of Courage, Fear and Hope, 1939-1944

By Rosemary Bailey

After many years of living in the Pyrenees, Rosemary Bailey came to realise how little she knew – and people did not want her to know – about the impact of the Second World War on her community.  She resolved to investigate the realities of the French experience of Occupation, the truth about Resistance and collaboration, the vital importance of the refugee routes across the mountains, and the heroic men and women who risked everything to help others escape.

The wartime experiences of the region are still very much a veiled history. Although people now acknowledge that the role of the Resistance in winning the war was glorified way beyond its actual numbers or achievements, few are willing to admit the extent of the acceptance of the German occupation, of the Fascist ideals of the Vichy government and the degree of collusion, passive or active, that occurred throughout these war years. The world still knows little of  the French concentration camps in the Pyrenees, the treatment of the Jews, the reaction to the Spanish refugees who fled across the border at the end of the Spanish Civil War and their role in the Resistance.  Many of the archives remain firmly closed.

This is a portrait of human tragedy, heroism and cruelty that will create an unforgettable portrait of the Second World War from a contemporary angle. Rosemary Bailey brilliantly connects the history to places that can still be visited today, the Mediterranean beaches where thousands were forced into camps, the escape routes followed across the mountains, the Resistance hideouts and midnight parachute landing grounds, and Valmanya, the village burned to the ground in vicious reprisal. She succeeds in creating immediacy out of the past, through love letters, interviews and encounters with people today, offering an emotional history underlying the bitter facts of wartime that is deeply affecting.



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