- Fernand Bonnier de La Chapelle
Fernand Bonnier de La Chapelle, born in 1922 in
Algiers and executed in that city onDecember 26 1942, was a member of the French resistance who shot Admiral of the FleetFrançois Darlan , the former chief of government ofVichy France and the self-named high commissioner of French North Africa and West Africa, onDecember 24 1942.A student at the Lycée Stanislas in Paris after France's surrender to
Nazi Germany onJune 22 1940 , Bonnier de La Chapelle participated in an anti-German student demonstration at theArc de Triomphe onArmistice Day ,November 11 1940. He then crossed in secret the demarcation line between German-occupied France and Vichy France and made his way to Algiers, where his father was a journalist. Having passed hisbaccalauréat examination in 1942, he was surprised by the Allied landings in North Africa (Operation Torch ) onNovember 8 1942 and by the participation of many of his friends in the so-calledputsch of November 8 , in which the resistance seized control of several Vichy government offices and headquarters in Algiers. An ardent anti-Vichyiste, he regretted that his friends had not asked him to take part in the putsch.After Darlan surrendered Algiers to Allied forces, General
Dwight D. Eisenhower , who feared armed resistance from Vichy sympathizers among the French, agreed to allow Darlan to govern French North Africa and West Africa under Vichyiste policies, which caused considerable consternation in the French population as well as in Washington and London. [ Porch, "The Path to Victory", pp. 361-63.] Bonnier de La Chapelle and three friends decided to eliminate the Admiral, and Bonnier de La Chapelle drew the short straw. Having obtained aRuby pistol , onDecember 24 1942 he waited in a corridor of the Summer Palace (Palais d’Été), the admiral's headquarters in Algiers, for Darlan to return to his office. He shot Darlan twice, once in the face and once in the chest, and then shot the admiral's aide-de-camp in the thigh. At that point, the occupants of the other offices in the Palais effected his capture. [ Atkinson, "An Army at Dawn", pp.251-52.]A military tribunal convened the next day,
December 25 . Bonnier de La Chapelle declared that he had acted alone, and he was condemned to death. He was executed by firing squad onDecember 26 1942. OnDecember 21 1945, the Court of Appeals in Algiers overturned the conviction, stating that he had acted "in the interest of the liberation of France."ources
* [http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fernand_Bonnier_de_La_Chapelle Fernand Bonnier de La Chapelle - Wikipédia ] at fr.wikipedia.org
*Douglas Porch, "The Path to Victory: The Mediterranean Theater in World War II", New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004.
*Rick Atkinson, "An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942-1943", New York: Henry Holt, 2002.References
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