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Members of the 108th company of the F.T.P.F. (Francs-tireurs et partisans français) resistance group pose with their weapons at a mountain base.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 75653

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    Members of the 108th company of the F.T.P.F. (Francs-tireurs et partisans français) resistance group pose with their weapons at a mountain base.
    Members of the 108th company of the F.T.P.F. (Francs-tireurs et partisans français) resistance group pose with their weapons at a mountain base.

Among those pictured is Claude Lowenstein (lying down at lower left).

    Overview

    Caption
    Members of the 108th company of the F.T.P.F. (Francs-tireurs et partisans français) resistance group pose with their weapons at a mountain base.

    Among those pictured is Claude Lowenstein (lying down at lower left).
    Date
    1944 July 20
    Locale
    France
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Marion Loewenstein

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Marion Loewenstein
    Source Record ID: Collections: 2014.386.1

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Claude Loewenstein was the son of Armand (b. Luxembourg) and Henriette (b. France) Loewenstein. He was born on February 12, 1928, in Luxembourg where his father owned a shoemaking supply business; his sister Fernande was five years older. On May 10, 1940, German units first entered Luxembourg. For the first few months, life continued more or less normally and Armand reopened business. However this changed by late summer when German Civil authorities moved in, annexed Luxembourg and instituted anti-Jewish measures. Armand's business was confiscated, and Claude was forbidden to start high school. That fall, most Luxembourg Jews were sent to neighboring France. For several days they were shuttled back and forth between towns in the occupied and unoccupied zones until a train brought them to the Gurs internment camp in southern France. Claude and his father lived in one part of the camp, and Fernande and their mother in another, but they were allowed to visit during the day. In December, Armand's sister and brother-in-law, Celestine and husband Alfred Weil, arranged for their release, and the Loewensteins left the camp the following month. For the next twenty-two months, they lived openly in the small town of Saint Antonin inTarn-et-Garonne. They had to report to the police, were assigned a residence, and could not seek employment or leave the town. Claude attended an excellent high school, and his father grew vegetables for the family. Then in August 1942, French police came to their house, told them to pack bags, and escorted them back to Gurs. The camp was divided into subdivisions called Ilots. Claude and his father lived in the French section where conditions were somewhat better than in the rest of the camp. Friends from St. Antonin sent them food packages, Claude received rudimentary Hebrew education, and celebrated his bar mitzvah while in the camp. So as not to be idle, he applied to the head prisoner of the Ilot to become a messenger boy and was given a pass and bicycle to perform his work. He received passes to visit his mother and sister during daylight hours. He also applied to work for a farmer outside the camp who was seeking young men to help with his fruit crop. However, before his application was processed, his non-Jewish aunt negotiated for the family's release and they went to the small village of Saint Romain d'Urfe. One day a runner came to say someone was trying to call him. At the village he received a phone call from the farmer who had traced him to ask if he was still interested in working there. Claude went to the farm and joined a group of about 15 young Jewish men. The rest of his family remained in the village. The boys worked picking and transporting up to 20 tons a day. In July 1944 a cell from the underground Franc-Tireurs et Partisans raided the farm to search for gasoline. They also asked the Jewish farmhands if they cared to join the cell. All 15 teenagers left with the partisans. England gave the partisans orders for their operations and guns and ammunition which they provided by parachute drop. In one operation the partisans climbed a mountain over-looking a road and dropped homemade grenades on an open truck filled with German soldiers thereby disrupting the convoy. The partisans then opened machine gun fire on the Germans. Claude, now sixteen years old, also participated in the liberation of Lyons. After the war ended, Claude reunited with his family and then returned to Luxembourg in early 1945. He was met by an aunt who remained in Luxembourg for the entire war since she was married to a non-Jew. Claude's parents returned a few weeks later. Claude's father reestablished his business. Claude helped out his father before joining the Luxembourg army and serving in the occupation of Bitburg near the Luxembourg border. Claude served for six months and went to England to study tanning and shoe making at a technical college. After his training, he again returned to Luxembourg and opened his own retail stores before immigrating to the United States in April 1956. Claude married Marion the following year.
    Record last modified:
    2023-02-24 00:00:00
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