- Gustave Biéler
Gustave Daniel Alfred Biéler DSO, MBE (
March 26 1904 –September 5 ,1944 ), was aSpecial Operations Executive agent duringWorld War II .Gustave Bieler was born in Beurlay in France. At the age of twenty, he emigrated to
Canada where he settled in the city of Montreal working as a school teacher and then as an official translator forSun Life Assurance and becoming a Canadian citizen. At the outbreak of World War II, although married with two children, Biéler joined theCanadian Army and was shipped to a base in Britain. His wife Marguerite Geymonat worked as a broadcaster to the troops in Europe onRadio-Canada International . Because of his familiarity with France and his fluency in the French andEnglish language s he joined the "Special Operations Executive" inLondon .Known by his wartime nickname "Guy," following his specialized training, Colonel
Maurice Buckmaster , the SOE commander, wrote in his file that Biéler was the best student SOE had. OnNovember 18 ,1942 , Biéler, along with wireless operatorArthur Staggs andMichael Trotobas were parachuted into France. Unfortunately, in the dark of the night, Biéler severely injured his back after landing on rocks and he spent several months recovering.Gifted with strong communication and organization skills, as the head of the "Musician Network" he was able to work with fellow SOE agents and members of the
French Resistance to organize very productive sabotage missions. Operating from a base in Saint-Quentin in the northernAisne "département", Biéler's twenty-five teams, scattered over different areas of northern France, were successful in damaging or destroying German gasoline storage tanks, rail lines, bridges, canal locks, and the electric tractors used to tow barges on the shipping waterways. Their repeated efforts hampered the movement of enemy arms and troops but the most important job for Biéler would eventually be the preparations forD-Day .His operations were so successful that the Germans instituted a special manhunt to get him and his team and on
January 13 ,1944 theGestapo arrested him and agentYolande Beekman in the Café Moulin Brulé in Saint-Quentin. At the Gestapo headquarters there the two were tortured repeatedly but never broke and a few months later Biéler was transferred toFlossenbürg concentration camp in theOberpfalz region ofBavaria , where the brutal torture continued. Getting nothing out of him, the Germans from whom he gained a great deal of respect, executed a crippled and emaciated Major Guy Biéler by a firing squad with a guard of honour, on September 5, 1944.Biéler's contribution to freedom was recognized with the
Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and he was made a Member of theOrder of the British Empire (MBE). In Saint-Quentin, France, he was adopted by the citizens as a folk hero not only for his exploits and bravery but also because he was someone who did everything possible to avoid civilian casualties. The "rue du Commandant Guy Biéler" in Saint-Quentin was named for him and as one of the SOE agents who died for the liberation ofFrance , he is listed on the "Roll of Honor" on theValençay SOE Memorial in the town ofValençay , in theIndre "département". As well, Major Biéler is recorded on the Groesbeek Memorial inGroesbeek Canadian War Cemetery in theNetherlands . On July 22, 2007 an exhibit on Bieler was unvailed at the opening of the museum in commemoration of all those who suffered and died at the Flossenbürg Camp at Flossenbürg, KZ, Germany. There are memorials honoring Bieler at Morcourt, and Fonsommes (France), on the memorial in a park in Wesmount, (Québec).The Centre Juno Beach at Courseulles-sur-mer has a plaque honoring:"Canadians behind enemy lines. Canadian Agents with the British Special Services". There is a Bieler lake in Canada. The veterans' residence in Montreal (Québec) is named after him.
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