- Henry Coston
Henry Coston (1910, in
Paris - 2001, inCaen ,Normandy ) was a Frenchfar right and anti-Semitic journalist, collaborationist andconspiracy theorist .After being a member of the
Action française , Coston was influenced by journalistÉdouard Drumont and took over his newspaper "La Libre Parole" (an anti-Semitic paper well known during theDreyfus affair ) in the 1930s. At the same time he created an "Anti-Jewish Youth" organisation "which campaigned for the exclusion of Jews from French life and in the run-up toWorld War II was in close touch with the German Nazi party's anti-Jewish propaganda service, the "Weltdienst"."Notorious French collaborator, Henri Coston, dies at 91", by Agence France-Presse, August 1, 2001.]During World War II, Coston belonged to
Jacques Doriot 's fascist PPF. He also was vice-president of the "Association of anti-Jewish Journalists" and he organised the publication of one of the most anti-Semitic document of theVichy regime , a tract entitled "I hate you" ("Je vous hais"). At the same period, he also wrote anti-Masonic pamphlets with his colleagueJacques Ploncard d'Assac .In 1944, he tried to escape in
Austria , but he was captured and sentenced to hard labour for life. He was pardoned in 1952 for illness and served only five years. He began writing again, mainly againstfree-masonry while he kept on denouncing the influence of Jews in French life.Until the 1990s he was contributing to different far-right newspapers. He was a supporter of the
Front National and occasionally wrote in its paper "National-Hebdo". From 1967 to 2000, Coston wrote a five-volume "Dictionary of French politics" ("Dictionnaire de la politique française"), which is considered as "exactly referenced" and "a non-negligible source of information" by the Jewish historianSimon Epstein . ["Les Dreyfusards sous l'Occupation", Albin Michel, 2001, p.346]Footnotes
References
* Adrian Dannatt, "Obituary: Henry Coston", in "The Independent" (London), August 27, 2001.
* "Notorious French collaborator, Henri Coston, dies at 91", by Agence France-Presse, August 1, 2001.
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