Subprefecture and commune in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France
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durée : 00:48:13 - Affaires sensibles - par : Fabrice Drouelle, Franck COGNARD - Aujourd'hui dans Affaires Sensibles, l'or de Vichy : 15 juin 1940, des officiers nazis se présentent à la Banque de France : ils veulent, prendre possession de l'or qui y est entreposé. Et il y a là beaucoup d'or : l'équivalent de 5 500 milliards d'euros - réalisé par : Stéphane COSME
durée : 00:20:28 - L'interview de 9h20 - par : Léa Salamé - Patrice Duhamel était l'invité de Léa Salamé ce lundi. Il publie « La photo » (éditions de l'Observatoire), un livre dans lequel il revient sur l'incroyable histoire de la photographie de François Mitterrand aux côtés du maréchal Pétain, le 15 octobre 1942, à Vichy.
durée : 00:20:28 - L'interview de 9h20 - par : Léa Salamé - Patrice Duhamel était l'invité de Léa Salamé ce lundi. Il publie « La photo » (éditions de l'Observatoire), un livre dans lequel il revient sur l'incroyable histoire de la photographie de François Mitterrand aux côtés du maréchal Pétain, le 15 octobre 1942, à Vichy.
durée : 00:04:33 - Le marché de François-Régis Gaudry - par : François-Régis Gaudry - François-Régis Gaudry nous raconte une étonnante découverte qu'il a faite dans un restaurant à Vichy, la fameuse station thermale du département de l'Allier…
Another whirlwird week of controversies that exceeded our bandwidth to keep up (or at least to compress into an hour), but John Yoo, this week's host, leads us in revisiting the question of "birthright citizenship" under the 14th Amendment, which the Supreme Court has rather unusually agreed to take up in May—surprisingly late for such and important oral argument. We take note of the growing number of scholars who think the current conventional wisdom is not a slam dunk at all! Apparently at least four Juctices agree.From there we discuss whether Trump's attack on Harvard is correctly calibrated, with Steve, in a rare moment, being more extreme than Lucretia on this issue. The Harvard controversy elides into a discussion of whether conservatives ought to be openly emulating the deep political strategy of Antonio Gramsci, as the Wall Street Journal pondered on Thursday. There is a lot of dissent on this point from "Vichy conservatives" who seem willing to continue losing slowly to the left.Finally, John can't help himself, and baits Steve and Lucretia on whether, on this 250th anniversary of the "shots heard round the world" at Lexington and Concord this week in 1775 really justified revolution against British rule. Lucretia makes quick work of this provocation, and a hush fell over the virtual studio.
durée : 00:03:17 - L'info d'ici, ici Pays d'Auvergne - Le parc des sources à Vichy va devenir non fumeur. La décision a été actée en conseil municipal début avril. La mairie va signer une charte avec la ligue contre le cancer fin mai. Le parc complètement rénové en cœur de ville sera inauguré le 21 juin.
durée : 00:03:22 - L'info d'ici, ici Pays d'Auvergne - 200 ans et encore tous ses arômes et ses vertus. Il s'agit de la pastille Vichy, le fameux bonbon octogonal connu de tous les français a été créé en 1825, par un curiste. Le lancement de ce bicentenaire a eu lieu ce samedi 12 avril, en plein cœur de la cité, dans le parc des sources.
Sport et nutrition naturelle — Bien manger pour mieux Bouger
Que manger avant et pendant une course ? Je me suis posé cette question avant chaque course et je pense que vous vous la posez vous aussi. Dans cet épisode je vais partager avec vous ma stratégie pour le marathon de Paris ce dimanche. Je vais vous dire ce que je mange les jours avant, le matin de la course et mon plan pendant la course. Et même mes petites routines et tocs.LiensCet épisode est sponsorisé par Nutripure : https://go.soulier.xyz/NutripureSN. Profitez de 10% de réduction sur votre première commande avec le code HAMSTERSLe bilan de ma préparation marathon express sur KM42 : https://km42.soulier.xyz/326L'atelier Semaine Zéro - Le plan anti-panique de la dernière semaine avant ton marathon (-10€) : : https://go.soulier.xyz/s0snTous les liens vers les anciens épisodes : https://sn.soulier.xyz/128L'objectif global avant une course c'est d'être en forme physique mais aussi mentale. Je crois beaucoup à la gestion du stress et tout ce qui peut nous tranquilliser l'esprit. La nutrition est un élément qui créé du stress tant pour ce que l'on mange que pour la logistique autour. C'est ce qui explique par exemple que je suis pas le régime scandinave dissocié.Dans cet épisode je vous partage :pourquoi le régime scandinave dissocié n'est pas adapté pour moicomment optimise son stock de glycogène pourquoi l'hydratation est importante pour stocker le glycogènece que je mange les jours avantce que j'évite de manger pour éviter les pépins digestifsla quantité de glucides à manger et d'eau à boire pour optimiser le stockma routine du matin et notamment du petit-déjeunerquel est mon plat fétiche quelle est aussi mon habitude et l'anecdote du jour où j'ai oublié de la fairece que j'ai prévu de consommer pendant la coursema stratégie pour les ravitaillementset est-ce que je pars avec mes pastilles Vichy.—❤️ Me suivre Tous les liens sont ici
Aujourd'hui, nous recevons Sandra, triathlète amatrice et co-fondatrice de Triloop, qui a brillé sur le circuit 70.3 en 2024 avec des performances marquantes à Nice, Vichy et Malaga. Sandra a décidé de rester sur le circuit amateur en 2025 tout en poursuivant son engagement entrepreneurial. Dans cet épisode, on plonge dans son parcours sportif, son choix de rester amateur une année de plus et l'équilibre entre performance et entrepreneuriat. Elle partage son organisation entre entraînement, gestion de Triloop et vie personnelle, ses ambitions pour 2025, et les coulisses de ses préparations. On parle aussi de l'impact des partenaires, du coût du triathlon et de la réalité financière d'un athlète amateur.Merci à Pillar qui nous soutient dans le cadre de cet épisode.
L'info du matin Grégory Ascher et Justine Salmon ont expliqué qu'il existerait un lien entre notre visage et notre caractère. Par exemple, certaines rides, notamment sur le front, pourraient refléter... la bêtise. Le winner du jour : - Fleury Roux, un passionné de trail, a traversé la France en suivant une ligne droite parfaite du sud au nord. - Julien Doré a créé la surprise ce week-end en faisant monter Dorothée sur scène lors de son concert. Ensemble, ils ont chanté "Allô, allô monsieur l'ordinateur". Le flashback de juin 2001 - L'album numéro 1 en France : "Próxima Estación... Esperanza" de Manu Chao, avec le titre "Me gustas tu". - Sortie du film "Pearl Harbor" de Michael Bay. Les savoirs inutiles : Les tirelires en forme de cochon remontent au Moyen Âge : dans les campagnes britanniques, posséder un cochon représentait un investissement sûr pour garantir un avenir sans difficultés. 3 choses à savoir sur Teddy Riner Qu'est-ce qu'on teste ? - Une plante artificielle développée par des chercheurs de New York purifie l'air et génère de l'électricité. - Hismile propose un dentifrice en édition limitée goût... poulet frit de KFC, vendu 12 €. Le jeu surprise : - Benjamin de Jossigny vers Disneyland Paris repart avec une valise KABUTO (valeur + de 400 €). La banque RTL2 : - Alexandra de Creuzier-le-Vieux vers Vichy repart avec une valise KABUTO (valeur + de 400 €). - Marine de Vairé vers Les Sables d'Olonne gagne 600 euros. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Sport et nutrition naturelle — Bien manger pour mieux Bouger
La pastille Vichy pourrait elle être intéressante pour mieux courir ? En tout un détail ne vous a pas échappé dans le bilan de ma semaine de préparation pour le marathon de Paris. J'ai en effet fait ma sortie longue la semaine dernière avec 3 pastilles Vichy. Pourquoi ? Est-ce une stratégie nutritionnelle secrète ? Je vais vous expliquer ce que je veux tester et pourquoi ça s'appuie sur des recherches scientifiques notamment sur les bénéfices du menthol dans la performance.Nous cherchons tous les meilleures solutions personnelles pour mieux manger, mieux nous hydrater, se sentir en forme, courir mieux et performer dans notre sport. C'est mon but et c'est le but de ce podcast. Et pour ça je fais des tests. L'idée m'est venue en lisant le livre de Fabrice Kuhn « La science de l'endurance 2 » avec 32 stratégies «spécial compétition». Il parle de l'utilisation en voie externe en mettant du menthol sur la peau ou par ingestion. Il s'appuie sur ses tests et des recherches et conclue : « Une boisson de l'effort mentholée est la solution tout-en-un idéale : hydratation grâce à l'eau et au sodium, apport glucidique et effets du menthol. »Grand fan des pastilles Vichy, j'en ai toujours à la maison et j'en consomme souvent avant d'aller au sport ou avant d'enregistrer mes épisodes de podcast, je me suis demandé si elles ne pouvaient pas m'aider à obtenir un résultat proche tout en apportant une aide mentale.LiensLe livre de Fabrice Kuhn : https://amzn.to/4iNB0Z3Dans l'épisode je parle de la gamme Long Distance Nutripure que j'utilise au quotidien. Profitez de 10% de réduction sur votre première commande avec le code HAMSTERS : https://go.soulier.xyz/NutripureSN. ❤️ Me suivre Tous les liens sont ici
Eric and Eliot discuss VP Vance's trip to Greenland and his appointment by the President to oversee the purging of American history at the Smithsonian and other museums. They also discuss who the biggest loser will be from Signalgate. They consider an excellent diplomatic memoir from the 1960s written by former Ambassador and Under Secretary of State Robert "Bob" Murphy -- Diplomat Among Warriors. Murphy pioneered the role of Political Advisor (POLAD) for military leaders working closely with Generals Dwight Eisenhower and Mark Clark on the invasion and subsequent governance of North Africa, Sicily and Italy and then worked with General Lucius Clay on the military government of Germany. They note Murphy's controversial role in maintaining diplomatic relations with the Vichy government of France and negotiating a deal with French Admiral Darlan to smooth the way for the invasion of North Africa. They also discuss critics like AJP Taylor who complained that the US had no policy during World War II and whether FDR's desire to postpone political decisions until after the war was naive or reflected a higher realism given the likely dominant role the US would have at the end of the war. They conclude that Murphy represents an important tradition of professionalism and subject matter expertise in government that is well worth preserving. Diplomat Among Warriors: The Unique World Of A Foreign Service Expert: https://a.co/d/742sKIz Shield of the Republic is a Bulwark podcast co-sponsored by the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia.
The Projection Booth wraps up another month of Patreon picks with what might be the most obscure film ever discussed on the show—Casablanca (1942), that little-known wartime romance directed by Michael Curtiz. Big thanks to Brian Tessitore for this hidden gem.Mike is joined by Bill Ackerman and Federico Bertolini to unpack the fog, flashbacks, and unforgettable lines of this cinematic unicorn. Humphrey Bogart stars as Rick Blaine, the brooding American expat running a nightclub in Vichy-controlled Morocco, where refugees gather in hopes of escaping the tightening grip of the Nazi regime. Things get complicated when Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman) strolls in—out of all the gin joints, etc.--alongside her resistance-leader husband, Victor Laszlo (Paul Henried).We're thrilled to be joined by two heavy-hitting guests: film historian Noah Isenberg, author of We'll Always Have Casablanca, and biographer Alan K. Rode, author of Michael Curtiz, A Life in Film which sheds light on the director's layered legacy. Together, we explore the myth, the making, and the magic of one of Hollywood's most enduring classics.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-projection-booth-podcast--5513239/support.
The Projection Booth wraps up another month of Patreon picks with what might be the most obscure film ever discussed on the show—Casablanca (1942), that little-known wartime romance directed by Michael Curtiz. Big thanks to Brian Tessitore for this hidden gem.Mike is joined by Bill Ackerman and Federico Bertolini to unpack the fog, flashbacks, and unforgettable lines of this cinematic unicorn. Humphrey Bogart stars as Rick Blaine, the brooding American expat running a nightclub in Vichy-controlled Morocco, where refugees gather in hopes of escaping the tightening grip of the Nazi regime. Things get complicated when Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman) strolls in—out of all the gin joints, etc.--alongside her resistance-leader husband, Victor Laszlo (Paul Henried).We're thrilled to be joined by two heavy-hitting guests: film historian Noah Isenberg, author of We'll Always Have Casablanca, and biographer Alan K. Rode, author of Michael Curtiz, A Life in Film which sheds light on the director's layered legacy. Together, we explore the myth, the making, and the magic of one of Hollywood's most enduring classics.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-projection-booth-podcast--5513239/support.
Vous écoutez le podcast "Les interviews Histoire", notre émission hebdomadaire gratuite pour tous. Abonnez-vous à "5.000 ans d'Histoire" et accédez à environ 400 podcasts d'1 heure pour seulement 2€ par mois sans Pub ! Avec une nouvelle émission chaque semaine : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/S-tavkjvmo De la fin de la « drôle de guerre » à l'effondrement du régime de Vichy, de nombreux prévenus sont jugés pour des motifs politiques par la justice française. Loin d'être une parenthèse dans l'histoire de France, la justice de Vichy est d'abord héritière du système judiciaire mis en place sous la République, qu'il s'agisse de son personnel, de ses lieux, de ses mots et de ses usages. Si, jusqu'à l'été 1941, la justice ordinaire est au coeur du dispositif de répression, traquant les adversaires de l'État français ou définis comme tels - communistes, Juifs, auteurs de délit d'opinion ou déserteurs -, un basculement s'opère ensuite avec le recours aux juridictions d'exception, sous l'oeil inquisiteur de l'occupant allemand. La section spéciale et le tribunal d'État deviennent les symboles de sanctions féroces et arbitraires : le 27 août, lors de la première audience, les juges de la section spéciale prononcent trois condamnations à mort pour propagande communiste. L'action des magistrats de carrière est néanmoins jugée insuffisante par le gouvernement, ce qui conduit peu à peu Vichy à choisir ses juges et à réduire inexorablement leurs compétences. Maîtrisant parfaitement les ressorts du paysage judiciaire en France, Jacques Duret s'efforce de les présenter de façon accessible et propose un récit incarné par les hommes et les femmes, victimes ou complices de la répression politique du régime de Vichy et de l'occupant allemand.L'auteur, Jacques Duret, est notre invité en studioDistribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Dans cette capsule, j'accueille Marie-Pier Michaud, Directrice générale de Vichy, pour une discussion approfondie sur un ingrédient clé de la jeunesse de la peau : le collagène. Elle nous explique son rôle essentiel dans la peau et le cuir chevelu, les signes visibles de sa diminution, ainsi que les facteurs qui accélèrent sa perte. On explore aussi la technologie Co-Bonding développée par Vichy, qui stimule le collagène naturellement présent, et ce qui la distingue des autres soins anti-âge. Forte d'un siècle d'expertise scientifique, Vichy nous aide à démystifier les mythes entourant le collagène, qu'il s'agisse de crèmes ou de suppléments. Une capsule claire, informative et riche en science pour mieux comprendre comment préserver la jeunesse de sa peau et de ses cheveux.
"Un édito aiguisé d'Arthur Chevallier, chaque matin à 7h10. Un parti-pris assumé sur une question d'actualité. D'accord ou pas, vous ne resterez pas indifférent. La chronique qui permet de réfléchir et aide à forger son opinion chaque matin du lundi au vendredi sur RMC et RMC Story."
Céline Géraud, accompagnée de la rédaction d'Europe 1, propose chaque midi un point complet sur l'actualité suivi de débats entre invités et auditeurs.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Céline Géraud, accompagnée de la rédaction d'Europe 1, propose chaque midi un point complet sur l'actualité suivi de débats entre invités et auditeurs.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Août 1942, région lyonnaise. Dans une France déchirée, le gouvernement de Vichy s'apprête à organiser une nouvelle rafle après le Vel' d'Hiv', en livrant à l'occupant nazi des juifs étrangers de la zone libre. Parmi eux figurent des centaines d'enfants. Quand l'abbé Glasberg apprend ce qui se trame, il a peu de temps devant lui pour agir. Fondateur de L'Amitié chrétienne, l'homme d'Église a épluché méthodiquement les lois jusqu'à trouver une faille : ses espoirs reposent sur une liste d'exemptions ! Sous couvert d'aider à trier les internés qui affluent, l'Abbé entame un véritable combat administratif. Grâce à une chaine de solidarité d'une ampleur inédite formée par des citoyens, des résistants et des membres de l'œuvre chrétienne, il va réussir à exfiltrer un très grand nombre de personnes du camp de Vénissieux en fournissant notamment de faux documents. Mais il sait que les convois vont bientôt emmener les femmes et les enfants qui restent. Il sait aussi qu'un ultime alinéa stipule l'impensable. Si les parents abandonnent leurs enfants, ces derniers ne peuvent être déportés. Le stratagème est déchirant. Dans la nuit du 28 au 29 août 1942, des mères et des pères vont faire un dernier acte d'amour pour éviter à leurs enfants la solution finale. Le sauvetage de 108 enfants du camp de transit de Vénissieux restera à jamais dans les mémoires. Arnaud Le Gouëfflec et Olivier Balez livrent une adaptation fidèle du livre de l'historienne Valérie Portheret qui signe ici la préface, à travers un album bouleversant où se pose la question de la responsabilité de chacun. Entre témoignage et travail de mémoire, le trait est sombre et le scénario concis. Il n'y a pas ici de grand héros, mais une solidarité qui rend compte du courage collectif face à l'inacceptable. Une œuvre édifiante à mettre entre toutes les mains. Historienne, Valérie Portheret a reconstitué, au terme de vingt-cinq ans de recherches, ce sauvetage des enfants du camp de Vénissieux, recueillant partout dans le monde, la parole d'un très grand nombre d'entre eux. Merci pour votre écoute N'hésistez pas à vous abonner également aux podcasts des séquences phares de Matin Première: L'Invité Politique : https://audmns.com/LNCogwPL'édito politique « Les Coulisses du Pouvoir » : https://audmns.com/vXWPcqxL'humour de Matin Première : https://audmns.com/tbdbwoQRetrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Retrouvez également notre offre info ci-dessous : Le Monde en Direct : https://audmns.com/TkxEWMELes Clés : https://audmns.com/DvbCVrHLe Tournant : https://audmns.com/moqIRoC5 Minutes pour Comprendre : https://audmns.com/dHiHssrEt si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Retour sur l'élection de Simone Veil à l'Académie française en 2010, avec les témoignages de personnalités sur son engagement et son parcours marqué par la Seconde Guerre mondiale.Notre équipe a utilisé un outil d'Intelligence artificielle via les technologies d'Audiomeans© pour accompagner la création de ce contenu écrit.En 2025, Europe 1 célèbre ses 70 ans. 70 ans d'histoire, de rires, de partages et d'émotions.Pour marquer cet anniversaire, découvrez une collection inédite de podcasts : "70 ans d'Europe 1".Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Le rachat des médias et leur concentration aux mains d'un petit groupe d'hommes d'affaires inquiète depuis longtemps les professionnels du milieu journalistique. Depuis quelques années, certaines écoles de journalisme, comme l'ESJ Paris, se font racheter par ces mêmes fortunes afin d'imprimer de façon encore plus importante leur influence sur le secteur. Lise Jacquez, responsable de formation du BUT information communication à Vichy et Pablo AIquel, secrétaire général de la SNJ, ont répondu au micro de Radio Campus France afin de partager leurs avis sur le sujet.
Controlada la isla por Vichy, la posibilidad de que fuese invadida y utilizada por japoneses o alemanes era alarmante. Fue la primera gran operación anfibia aliada de la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Las fuerzas británicas, apoyadas por la Royal Navy, desembarcaron en Diego-Suárez, capturando el puerto tras intensos combates. Aunque la resistencia francesa continuó meses, la operación aseguró el control aliado del Índico occidental, protegiendo rutas marítimas cruciales hacia Egipto y la India. Te lo cuenta Esaú Rodríguez. Casus Belli Podcast pertenece a 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. Casus Belli Podcast forma parte de 📀 Ivoox Originals. 📚 Zeppelin Books (Digital) y 📚 DCA Editor (Físico) http://zeppelinbooks.com son sellos editoriales de la 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. Estamos en: 🆕 WhatsApp https://bit.ly/CasusBelliWhatsApp 👉 X/Twitter https://twitter.com/CasusBelliPod 👉 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/CasusBelliPodcast 👉 Instagram estamos https://www.instagram.com/casusbellipodcast 👉 Telegram Canal https://t.me/casusbellipodcast 👉 Telegram Grupo de Chat https://t.me/casusbellipod 📺 YouTube https://bit.ly/casusbelliyoutube 👉 TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@casusbelli10 👉 https://podcastcasusbelli.com 👨💻Nuestro chat del canal es https://t.me/casusbellipod ⚛️ El logotipo de Casus Belli Podcasdt y el resto de la Factoría Casus Belli están diseñados por Publicidad Fabián publicidadfabian@yahoo.es 🎵 La música incluida en el programa es Ready for the war de Marc Corominas Pujadó bajo licencia CC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ El resto de música es bajo licencia privada de Epidemic Music, Jamendo Music o SGAE SGAE RRDD/4/1074/1012 de Ivoox. 📧¿Queréis contarnos algo? También puedes escribirnos a casus.belli.pod@gmail.com ¿Quieres anunciarte en este podcast, patrocinar un episodio o una serie? Hazlo a través de 👉 https://www.advoices.com/casus-belli-podcast-historia Si te ha gustado, y crees que nos lo merecemos, nos sirve mucho que nos des un like, ya que nos da mucha visibilidad. Muchas gracias por escucharnos, y hasta la próxima. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Vous écoutez le podcast "Les interviews Histoire", notre émission hebdomadaire gratuite pour tous. Abonnez-vous à "5.000 ans d'Histoire" et accédez à environ 350 podcasts d'1 heure pour seulement 2€ par mois sans Pub ! Avec une nouvelle émission chaque semaine : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/S-tavkjvmo Qu'est-ce que la nation française ? La question s'est posée à de multiples reprises au fil de l'histoire, parfois de manière très vive comme lors de la Révolution, de la perte de l'Alsace-Lorraine, du régime de Vichy et jusqu'à nos fractures contemporaines. S'agit-il d'une communauté ethnique, linguistique, territoriale, d'une organisation politique de citoyens désireux de vivre ensemble ou bien encore d'une construction historique d'un autre type ? Doit-on la faire remonter à 1789, à la bataille de Bouvines, au baptême de Clovis, voire à « nos ancêtres les Gaulois » ? A-t-elle encore un avenir à l'heure de l'intégration européenne, de la mondialisation et du post-modernisme ?Ce sujet capital occupe l'espace public car il interroge au fond la forme même d'organisation de notre société. C'est aussi un terrain complexe qui donne lieu à de multiples interprétations et instrumentalisations politiques ; il est sulfureux, comme le nationalisme qui ressurgit souvent avec lui. Cela explique pourquoi il n'a pas été traité autrement que par bribes et avec d'infinies précautions depuis un demi-siècle.Revisiter et raconter l'histoire de ce qui fait nation en France dans sa globalité, telle est la raison d'être de ce livre.Eric Anceau était notre invitée, en studio, et en vidéo sur YouTube
Muy poco conocida la extrañísima Campaña de Siria y el Líbano de 1941, donde la Francia de Vichy debe defender estas entonces colonias de la invasión de la Francia Libre y del Ejército Británico. Unos aguerridos comandos escoceses debían desembarcar y tomar el estratégico puente sobre el río Litani, que no solo serviría para facilitar la entrada del grueso británico, e impedir la gloria a los "aliados" de la Francia Libre. Pero todo lo que podía salir mal, salió peor. ¿Qué podía salir mal? Con Juan Pastrana, Julio Caronte y Esaú Rodríguez. Casus Belli Podcast pertenece a 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. Casus Belli Podcast forma parte de 📀 Ivoox Originals. 📚 Zeppelin Books (Digital) y 📚 DCA Editor (Físico) http://zeppelinbooks.com son sellos editoriales de la 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. Estamos en: 🆕 WhatsApp https://bit.ly/CasusBelliWhatsApp 👉 X/Twitter https://twitter.com/CasusBelliPod 👉 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/CasusBelliPodcast 👉 Instagram estamos https://www.instagram.com/casusbellipodcast 👉 Telegram Canal https://t.me/casusbellipodcast 👉 Telegram Grupo de Chat https://t.me/casusbellipod 📺 YouTube https://bit.ly/casusbelliyoutube 👉 TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@casusbelli10 👉 https://podcastcasusbelli.com 👨💻Nuestro chat del canal es https://t.me/casusbellipod ⚛️ El logotipo de Casus Belli Podcasdt y el resto de la Factoría Casus Belli están diseñados por Publicidad Fabián publicidadfabian@yahoo.es 🎵 La música incluida en el programa es Ready for the war de Marc Corominas Pujadó bajo licencia CC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ El resto de música es bajo licencia privada de Epidemic Music, Jamendo Music o SGAE SGAE RRDD/4/1074/1012 de Ivoox. 📧¿Queréis contarnos algo? También puedes escribirnos a casus.belli.pod@gmail.com ¿Quieres anunciarte en este podcast, patrocinar un episodio o una serie? Hazlo a través de 👉 https://www.advoices.com/casus-belli-podcast-historia Si te ha gustado, y crees que nos lo merecemos, nos sirve mucho que nos des un like, ya que nos da mucha visibilidad. Muchas gracias por escucharnos, y hasta la próxima. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Laurent Joly "Le savoir des victimes (Grasset)Comment l'histoire du régime de Vichy et du génocide des juifs a-t-elle été écrite en France depuis 1945 ? Sous quelle forme, dans quel contexte et au terme de quels combats la vérité sur les crimes antisémites de Vichy s'est-elle imposée au plus grand nombre ?C'est ce que cet essai d'histoire de l'histoire se propose d'interroger : une plongée dans l'histoire de France des années 1940 jusqu'à nos jours, à travers les livres, les polémiques de presse, les controverses intellectuelles, les films, les émissions de télévision, et aussi les politiques commémoratives et les affaires judiciaires. Laurent Joly, dans cette synthèse magistrale, raconte le récit mensonger, largement diffusé jusqu'à la fin des années 1960, fondée sur la stratégie judiciaire de Pétain et Laval, qui tentèrent de faire passer leur action criminelle pour une politique de « moindre mal » destinée à sauver les juifs français. Il révèle aussi un travail historique fondé sur les archives, élaboré par les chercheurs d'une institution unique au monde, le Centre de documentation juive contemporaine (CDJC), dès 1945 ; et une approche « pacifiante » - portée par journalistes ou universitaires soucieux de « réconciliation nationale », au prix de la vérité scientifique…Cette histoire fut racontée aussi à travers des travaux et des destins - historiens, journalistes, militants de la mémoire et hommes politiques, témoins, sur plus de cinquante ans : Léon Poliakov, Joseph Billig, Serge Klarsfeld ; Henri Michel, Robert Paxton ou Henry Rousso ; Raymond Aron, Robert Aron ou Henri Amouroux ; Josée Laval, René de Chambrun, Me Isorni ou Alfred Fabre-Luce ; Charles de Gaulle ou François Mitterrand.La vérité sur un crime d'Etat ne peut résider dans un « juste milieu » entre le point de vue des « bourreaux » et celui des « victimes ». Ce n'est que lorsque les intermédiaires culturels, ainsi que les autorités politiques et judiciaires, ordinairement portés vers la vision « pacifiante », prennent sérieusement en compte la souffrance des « victimes » et portent un regard véritablement critique sur les justifications des « bourreaux », s'approchant ainsi de la posture scientifique des chercheurs spécialisés, que l'apaisement civique et la réconciliation nationale sont possibles.Musique: Françoiz Breut : "Cavales animales". Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Fa alguns mesos, una polèmica va créixer al voltant d'un carrer d'Argelers de la Marenda. El problema, el seu nom: Alfons Miàs. Un personatge ambigu. D'una banda, pioner del catalanisme modern dels anys 1930, i, d'altra banda, sospitós de col·laboració amb el règim de Vichy. L'ocasió d'interessar-se de més prop al recorregut singular d'aquest home.En parlem amb Andreu Balent, professor i historiador, que ha publicat un article sobre Alfons Miàs en el llibre col·lectiu: Ultralocalisme. D'allò local a l'universal (editorial Afers).
durée : 00:11:12 - L'Avant-scène - par : Aurélie Charon - Julie Bertin et Jade Herbulot sont les metteuses en scène du "Birgit Ensemble". Leur dernier spectacle "Les Suppliques" met en scène des lettres de familles juives écrites entre 1941 et 1943 au régime de Vichy pour sauver leurs proches. - réalisation : Alexandre Fougeron - invités : Julie Bertin Comédienne et metteuse en scène; Jade Herbulot Comédienne et metteuse en scène
Bienvenue dans les Fabuleux Destin, le podcast pour découvrir des histoires vraies et étonnantes. Cette semaine, découvrez l'incroyable histoire du couple Lucie et Raymond Aubrac. Véritable héros de la résistance lors de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Ils ont mené des actions dans le but d'informer les différents groupes résistants français permettant aux forces armées de perdurer pendant l'occupation. Proche de Jean Moulin, et d'autres grands noms de la résistance, ils sont des personnages incontournables de cette période historique. Joignez-vous à nous et revivez ce récit au travers de cette saison. “La dernière colonne” Lucie et Raymond Aubrac ont réussi à rejoindre la Zone Libre. Ils y retrouvent un groupe d'hommes dans un café de Clermont-Ferrand : tous sont bouleversés par la poignée de main de Montoire, qu'ils considèrent comme une trahison impardonnable : ensemble, ils imaginent un engagement clandestin contre Vichy et l'occupation allemande. De Gaulle a été entendu : la Résistance est née… Et ne reculera devant rien. Pour découvrir d'autres récits passionnants, cliquez ci-dessous : [INEDIT] L'incroyable aventure de Junko Tabei : une femme sur l'Everest [INEDIT] L'incroyable aventure d'Emma Gatewood : il n'est jamais trop tard [INEDIT] L'incroyable aventure de Christopher McCandeless : perdu dans l'Alaska [INEDIT] L'incroyable aventure de Cheryl Strayed : un nouveau départ pour sevrage Un podcast Bababam Originals Ecriture : Clément Prévaux Production : Bababam Voix : Andréa Brusque Première diffusion le 18 juillet 2024. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Julia Carrie Wong joined the show to discuss her recent exploring comparisons between today's Democratic Party and Vichy France: a short-lived rump state that capitulated to the German Nazi party in WWII. You can read Julia's article here: Capitulating to Trump: why people are warning about ‘Vichy' America.In the wake of recent political events, the trio would also like to encourage those who are able to consider making a donation to The Trevor Project, which fights for the safety and dignity of LGBTQ+ youth. (Click here to donate) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit postthroughit.substack.com
Marie-Louise Giraud, guillotinée le 30 juillet 1943, est l'une des dernières femmes exécutées en France pour le crime d'avortement. Son histoire s'inscrit dans un contexte historique particulier, marqué par l'occupation allemande et la politique répressive du régime de Vichy. Le contexte historique et législatif Sous le régime de Vichy (1940-1944), la France est soumise à une idéologie conservatrice qui prône le retour aux valeurs traditionnelles, notamment en matière de famille et de natalité. Le gouvernement du maréchal Pétain impose une politique nataliste stricte, visant à encourager les naissances pour redresser la démographie française affaiblie après la Première Guerre mondiale et l'exode de 1940. L'avortement, déjà illégal depuis la loi de 1920, devient un crime d'État sous Vichy, passible de la peine de mort en vertu d'une loi de 1942 qui le qualifie d'« attentat contre la sûreté de l'État ». Le parcours de Marie-Louise Giraud Née en 1903, Marie-Louise Giraud est une femme issue d'un milieu modeste vivant à Cherbourg. Pendant l'Occupation, elle se livre à des avortements clandestins afin de subvenir aux besoins de sa famille. Les femmes ayant recours à ses services sont souvent dans des situations désespérées, avec des maris absents ou en grande précarité. On estime qu'elle a pratiqué environ 27 avortements, la plupart sur des femmes d'ouvriers et de marins. Denoncée à la police, elle est arrêtée en 1942 et jugée en 1943 par un tribunal d'exception mis en place par Vichy pour punir sévèrement les crimes considérés comme anti-nationaux. Elle est accusée non seulement d'avoir pratiqué des avortements, mais aussi de « débauche » et de mise en danger de la société. Son procès est expéditif et exemplaire : dans un contexte où le gouvernement cherche à montrer sa fermeté, elle est condamnée à mort pour l'effet dissuasif de son exécution. Son exécution et son héritage Le 30 juillet 1943, Marie-Louise Giraud est guillotinée à la prison de la Roquette, à Paris. Son exécution a provoqué une onde de choc en France, certains la voyant comme une victime des circonstances, d'autres comme une criminelle. Elle est devenue un symbole de la répression aveugle du régime de Vichy et du combat pour les droits des femmes. Aujourd'hui, son histoire est souvent évoquée dans le cadre des luttes féministes, en particulier après la légalisation de l'avortement en France avec la loi Veil en 1975, qui a marqué une avancée majeure dans les droits reproductifs des femmes. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Last time we spoke about the return to Bataan. In late January, the 43rd Division secured the Rosario region, while the 25th and 6th Divisions eliminated enemy detachments and advanced towards Manila. General Krueger received reinforcements and planned a coordinated attack. On January 28, an assault began, with guerrillas aiding American forces in capturing strategic locations. A daring raid freed 522 POWs, while MacArthur planned further landings to cut off Japanese retreat. By January's end, American forces were poised for a final offensive, pushing closer to victory in Luzon. The ZigZag Pass became a fierce battleground, where Colonel Nagayoshi's well-camouflaged defenses faced relentless assaults from American forces. Despite challenges, the 129th and 20th Regiments made strategic gains, while the 35th Regiment maneuvered through treacherous terrain. Meanwhile, paratroopers from the 511th struggled with scattered landings but secured key positions. As the fighting intensified, the Allies prepared for a decisive invasion of Iwo Jima, aiming to establish a stronghold for future operations against Japan. This episode is the Battle of Manila Welcome to the Pacific War Podcast Week by Week, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800's until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. As we last observed, by February 3, General Iwanaka's 2nd Tank Division was fending off assaults from the 6th and 25th Divisions in the San Jose area but was on the verge of being encircled. Meanwhile, General Griswold's 14th Corps had successfully taken control of Clark Field and was reorganizing for a final offensive against the Kembu Group. General Hall's 11th Corps had landed on the Bataan Peninsula and was engaged in combat with the Nagayoshi Detachment at ZigZag Pass. Additionally, General Swing's 11th Airborne Division had landed at Nasugbu and had successfully captured Tagaytay Ridge in preparation for an advance toward Manila from the south. The 37th and 1st Cavalry Divisions were advancing on Manila from the north, with the latter's two Flying Columns reaching the outskirts of the Filipino capital. At this stage, the capital was defended by Admiral Iwabuchi's Manila Naval Defense Force, which had consolidated its forces into three primary operational sectors: the Northern Force, led by Colonel Noguchi Katsuzo, responsible for Intramuros on the south bank and all areas of the city north of the Pasig; the Central Force, commanded by Iwabuchi himself, encompassing all of metropolitan Manila south of the Pasig River and extending inland to Guadalupe; and the Southern Force, under Captain Furuse Takesue, covering the Nichols Field and Fort McKinley sectors, as well as the Hagonoy Isthmus. Iwabuchi intended for the Noguchi Force to retreat to Intramuros after disabling the Pasig bridges, while other units carried out extensive demolitions of military infrastructure, including the port area, bridges, transportation systems, water supply, and electrical installations. However, since the Japanese did not anticipate the Americans' arrival for another two weeks, they were ill-prepared to execute these missions or launch any significant counterattacks. Recognizing that the cavalry units were twelve hours ahead of the 148th Regiment, Griswold authorized General Mudge to enter the city. Consequently, late in the afternoon, the 8th Cavalry's Flying Column encountered minimal resistance as it crossed the city limits and advanced towards the gates of Santo Tomas University, where nearly 4,000 American and Allied civilian internees were being held, facing severe shortages of food and medical supplies. Upon their arrival at Santo Tomas, the advance elements of the 8th Cavalry, a medium of the 44th Tank Battalion serving as a battering ram, broke through the gates of the campus wall. Inside, the Japanese Army guards--most of them Formosans--put up little fight and within a few minutes some 3500 internees were liberated amid scenes of pathos and joy none of the participating American troops will ever forget. But in another building away from the internees' main quarters some sixty Japanese under Lt. Col. Hayashi Toshio, the camp commander, held as hostages another 275 internees, mostly women and children. Hayashi demanded a guarantee for safe conduct from the ground for himself and his men before he would release the internees. General Chase, who had come into the university campus about an hour after the 8th Cavalry entered, had to accept the Japanese conditions. In the end, Hayashi obtained permission to lead his unit out with what arms they could carry in exchange for the release of the Allied internees held as hostages. They were then taken by the Americans to the outskirts of Manila early on February 5 and released. Meanwhile, Hayashi was subsequently killed in action. While General Chase worked to secure the release of the internees, Troop G of the 8th Cavalry continued its march south towards the Pasig River but was ultimately compelled to retreat due to heavy fire from the Far Eastern University. Meanwhile, frustrated with the slow progress of General Jones' 38th Division, Hall ordered the 34th Regiment to move past the 152nd and press the attack eastward. Unfortunately, Colonel William Jenna's enveloping assault with the 1st Battalion also failed to penetrate Colonel Nagayoshi's robust defenses. As a result, Jenna opted to deploy his entire regiment in a coordinated three-pronged attack, which commenced on February 4. Initially, the attack, supported by the 1st Battalion of the 152nd Regiment, showed promise; however, due to ongoing strong resistance, including intense mortar and artillery fire, the 34th Regiment had to relinquish much of the territory it had captured by dusk. To the north, the 149th Regiment resumed its advance along the bypass trail and successfully made contact with patrols from the 40th Division near Dinalupihan by the end of February 4, having already reached the town. Looking northeast, with enemy armored units at Muñoz and Lupao effectively contained, the 161st Regiment successfully established roadblocks on Route 8 southeast of San Isidro. Most notably, the 1st Regiment entered San Jose in the morning with little resistance and quickly secured the area, thereby completely isolating the majority of the 2nd Tank Division before it could receive orders to withdraw. As a result, the 6th and 25th Divisions were able to methodically eliminate the enemy's isolated strongholds at their convenience. Further south, by the end of the day, the 8th Cavalry liberated 4,000 internees at Santo Tomas; Troop F also secured Malacañan Palace; the 2nd Squadron, 5th Cavalry advanced toward Quezon Bridge but faced strong resistance at Far Eastern University, where the enemy successfully destroyed the bridge before retreating; and the 148th Regiment entered Manila, moving south through the Tondo and Santa Cruz Districts to reach the northwest corner of Old Bilibid Prison, where they freed 800 prisoners of war and 530 civilian internees. Finally, to the south, the 2nd Battalion, 511th Parachute Regiment departed from Tagaytay Ridge along Route 17, swiftly passing through Imus and Zapote to secure the Las Piñas River bridge. The 1st Battalion followed in the late afternoon but was ultimately halted by mortar and artillery fire at Parañaque. On February 5, the paratroopers managed to cross the Parañaque and began advancing north along Route 1, engaging in house-to-house and pillbox-to-pillbox combat as they moved 2,000 yards north over the next two days. Simultaneously, the majority of the 145th Regiment commenced operations in the densely populated Tondo District along the bay, while other units advanced into the San Nicolas and Binondo Districts to combat the fires ignited by Noguchi's demolitions. Throughout February 5 the 37th Division's men had heard and observed Japanese demolitions in the area along and just north of the Pasig in the Binondo and San Nicolas Districts as well as in the North Port Area, on the 145th's right front. The Northern Force was firing and blowing up military stores and installations all through the area and, as these tasks were completed, was withdrawing south across the river. Insofar as 14th Corps observers could ascertain, there was no wanton destruction, and in all probability the fires resulting from the demolitions would have been confined to the North Port Area and the river banks had not an unseasonable change in the wind about 20:30 driven the flames north and west. The 37th Division, fearing that the flames would spread into residential districts, gathered all available demolitions and started destroying frame buildings in the path of the fire. The extent of these demolitions cannot be ascertained--although it is known that the work of destruction continued for nearly 24 hours--and is an academic point at best since the demolitions proved largely ineffectual in stopping the spread of the flames. The conflagration ran north from the river to Azcarraga Street and across that thoroughfare into the North Port Area and Tondo District. The flames were finally brought under control late on February 6 along the general line of Azcarraga Street, but only after the wind again changed direction. The 148th Regiment fought its way to the Santa Cruz District but was unable to reach the bridges before they were destroyed. The 5th and 8th Cavalry Regiments cleared the eastern part of the city north of the Pasig with minimal resistance, and the 7th Cavalry secured the Novaliches Dam and the Balara Water Filters, which were found intact but rigged for demolition. To the northwest, the battle for ZigZag Pass continued. Dissatisfied with his progress, Hall had previously informed Jones that the exhibition of his division was the worst he had ever seen--a rather severe indictment of an entire division, as only the 152nd Regiment had yet seen any real action on Luzon. Furthermore, the 152nd was a green unit that had been in combat scarcely 48 hours by February 2. Nevertheless, as he believed that the 152nd had at most encountered only an outpost line of resistance, that the principal Japanese defenses lay a mile or so east of the horseshoe, and that the 152nd had found "nothing that an outfit ready to go forward could not overcome quickly", Hall assumed direct control over the 34th Regiment for the main assault and left only the 152nd under Jones' command, which was to follow the 34th through the ZigZag to mop up bypassed pockets of Japanese resistance. Yet the fighting at the horseshoe on February 3 and 4 was equally disappointing, costing the 34th some 41 men killed, 131 wounded, and 6 missing while on the same days the 152nd lost 4 men killed, 48 wounded, and 1 missing. The 34th had extended the front a little to the north of the horseshoe and a bit east of the eastern leg, but neither the 34th nor the 152nd had made any substantial gains beyond the point the 152nd had reached on February 2. The Japanese still held strong positions north of the horseshoe and they still controlled the northeastern corner and about half the eastern leg. The 34th's greatest contribution during the two days, perhaps, was to have helped convince Hall that the Japanese had strong defenses throughout the ZigZag area and that the regiment had indeed reached a Japanese main line of resistance. It had not been until evening on February 4 that Hall was convinced that the 34th and 152nd Regiments had encountered a well-defended Japanese line. Hall instructed Jones to launch an eastward attack with all available forces. Although the initial phase of the attack was promising, the 2nd Battalion of the 34th Regiment became trapped and had to retreat. After sustaining significant casualties, Jenna ordered the 1st Battalion to fall back as well and halted the 3rd Battalion's advance. This left the 152nd Regiment, which achieved considerable progress and cleared much of the northern and central sections of the ridge; however, its 1st Battalion was ultimately ambushed at close range and forced to retreat in chaos during the night. The following day, due to heavy losses, the 34th Regiment was withdrawn from combat, and the reserve 151st Regiment was deployed to support the 152nd. The 2nd Battalion of the latter was also pulled back from the southeastern corner of the horseshoe as artillery focused on Nagayoshi's defenses. Nevertheless, at noon, Hall called for another assault, prompting Jones to reluctantly advance the 152nd Regiment, with only its 3rd Battalion making significant headway against the northeast corner of the horseshoe. Hall had already made his decision; he relieved Jones and appointed Brigadier-General Roy Easley to take temporary command, with General Chase scheduled to arrive on February 7 to lead the 38th Division. Looking westward, after a week of securing previously held areas, General Brush had positioned the 185th Regiment in the north and the 108th Regiment in the south, while the 160th Regiment maintained its positions at Storm King Mountain in preparation for a renewed assault on the Kembu Group. However, before the divisional attack could resume, the 160th Regiment became engaged in a fierce battle for McSevney Point, which was finally secured by dusk on February 8. After fending off several banzai-style counterattacks, the Americans learned on February 10 that the Takaya Detachment had retreated. Meanwhile, the 185th began its advance toward Snake Hill North on February 7, taking three days of intense fighting to capture half the ground leading to this objective. The 108th also moved westward on February 8, making slow progress as it cleared the paths to the Japanese hill strongholds. Further northwest, the 6th and 25th Divisions were conducting mop-up operations in the San Jose sector. By February 6, the 20th Regiment's pressure on Muñoz had resulted in the destruction of nearly 35 tanks, although another 20 remained operational. The next morning, Colonel Ida finally attempted to escape via Route 5; however, the entire Japanese column was successfully destroyed while the 20th Regiment secured Muñoz. At Lupao, the 35th Regiment continued to push the Japanese garrison into an increasingly confined area. As a result, on the night of February 7, the defenders attempted to flee, with five tanks successfully breaking through the 35th's perimeter. The dismounted Japanese forces in the town dispersed, and by noon on February 8, the 35th had taken control of Lupao with minimal resistance. Meanwhile, the Japanese garrison at San Isidro had retreated before the 161st Regiment could capture the town on February 6. The 63rd Regiment successfully took Rizal on February 7, while the 20th Regiment secured Bongabon and cleared the route to Cabanatuan on February 8. Strong patrols were then dispatched toward Dingalen and Baler Bays, which were found deserted by February 12. Back in Manila on February 7, the 37th Division assumed control of the eastern part of the city, while cavalry units advanced beyond the city limits to clear the suburbs east of the San Juan River, with the 8th Cavalry pushing toward San Juan del Monte despite heavy resistance. Most notably, under a strong artillery barrage, the 148th Regiment crossed the Pasig River in assault boats, facing intense machine-gun, mortar, and artillery fire. Despite this fierce opposition, two battalions managed to assemble in the Malacañan Gardens area by the end of the day. Further south, the 511th Parachute and the reinforced 188th Glider Regiment launched an unsuccessful coordinated attack on Nichols Field. Over the next two days, the 511th secured a narrow strip of land between the Parañaque River and the western runway of the airfield, overrunning some defenses at the northwest corner, while the 188th struggled to gain ground in the south and southeast. On ZigZag, Chase managed to deploy three regiments for his initial assaults, with the 151st and 152nd Regiments attacking from the west, while the 149th Regiment advanced from the east. The 5th Air Force initiated an extensive bombing and strafing campaign against the pass, and corps and division artillery increased their support fire. Despite this, the Japanese stubbornly held their ground, and it wasn't until the evening of February 8 that the 151st and 152nd Regiments overcame the last significant defenses near the horseshoe area. On that day, the 7th Cavalry captured San Juan Reservoir, and the 8th Cavalry successfully attacked San Juan del Monte, completing the area's reduction as the defenders retreated toward Montalban. The 145th Regiment launched a final assault on the Tondo District pocket, which would be completely eliminated the following day, while the 148th Regiment cleared the Pandacan District with minimal resistance. The 129th Regiment crossed the Pasig River in the afternoon and moved west toward Provisor Island but was halted by heavy fire at the Estero de Tonque. On February 9, the 8th Cavalry secured El Deposito, an underground reservoir supplied by artesian wells, and advanced south to reach the north bank of the Pasig River. The 148th Regiment began clearing the Paco District but failed to eliminate a strongpoint at Paco Railroad Station and the nearby Concordia College and Paco School buildings. Meanwhile, Company G of the 129th Regiment managed to cross to Provisor and entered the boiler plant, only to be quickly repelled by a Japanese counterattack. After an improvised evacuation overnight, tith close support--so close that the fifteen survivors had to keep prone--from the 2nd Battalion's mortars, Company G's isolated group hung on for the rest of the day while the battalion made plans to evacuate them so that artillery could again strike the island. After dark Company G's commander, Captain George West, swam across the Estero de Tonque dragging an engineer assault boat behind him. Although wounded, he shuttled his troops back to the east bank in the dim light of flames from burning buildings on and south of the island. When a count was taken about midnight, Company G totaled 17 casualties--6 men killed, 5 wounded, and 6 missing--among the 18 men, including Captain West, who had reached Provisor Island during the previous eighteen hours. Despite facing strong resistance, Company E successfully crossed and captured the eastern half of the boiler plant. The Americans gradually cleared the remainder of the boiler house, but every attempt to venture outside drew fire from all available Japanese weapons in range of Provisor Island. At the same time, the 148th Regiment finally secured the Paco District after the enemy abandoned their stronghold during the night, allowing the Americans to gain control of the east bank of the Estero de Paco. The 1st Battalion of the 129th Regiment advanced to both this estero and the Estero de Tonque. The 8th Cavalry crossed the Pasig, establishing a bridgehead about 1,000 yards deep in the Philippine Racing Club area, while the 5th Cavalry moved south alongside the 8th, encountering only scattered resistance as they also crossed the Pasig at Makati. Swing's forces consolidated their gains and established a solid line from the northwest corner to the southwest corner of Nichols Field, eliminating the last Japanese resistance on the western side, while elements of the 511th Parachute Regiment advanced along Route 1 nearly a mile beyond the field's northwest corner. On this day, the 11th Airborne Division came under the control of the 14th Corps, with Griswold ordering Swing to maintain pressure on Nichols Field without launching a general assault toward Manila. Now, however, it was time to leave the Philippines and shift focus to Bougainville to cover the ongoing Australian offensive. Following the capture of Pearl Ridge, Brigadier Stevenson's 11th Brigade assumed control of the central and northern sectors, while General Bridgeford's 3rd Division focused its efforts in the Jaba River region to prepare for an offensive southward. By the end of December, the 15th Battalion had landed in the Tavera River area, and the 47th Battalion launched an attack up the Jaba River to disrupt enemy forces. In the first week of January, Brigadier Monaghan redeployed his troops, with the 42nd Battalion and 2/8th Commando Squadron taking over from the 47th to enable its movement down the coast to support the 15th Battalion. As a result, the Australians swiftly occupied the mouth of the Adele River and secured the Tavera area. By January 12, the 47th Battalion had advanced to the mouth of the Hupai River; however, with the Japanese seemingly reinforcing the Kupon-Nigitan-Mendai area on the Australian flank, Monaghan decided to slow his advance while the 2/8th Commandos conducted reconnaissance toward the Pagana River. With no threats emerging, the 42nd Battalion relieved the 47th on January 17 and advanced unopposed to Mawaraka. In the subsequent days, a long-range patrol from the New Guinea Battalion landed by sea and moved forward to Motupena Point, where they caught a Japanese listening post by surprise. While Monaghan awaited relief from Brigadier Field's 7th Brigade in late January, patrols ventured deep into the Sisiruai area and continued to scout beyond Mawaraka. Meanwhile, the 2/8th Commandos moved to Sovele Mission and patrolled the mountains toward Kieta, occasionally assisting the Kapikavi people in their guerrilla warfare against the Japanese. While the 11th Brigade concentrated in its northern operations, patrols generally guided by native police were sent out for from 1 day to 6 days to probe forward through the bush. The 11th Battery relieved the 10th and it replaced its short 25-pounders with long 25-pounders, with their greater range, in order to support these deep patrols more effectively; from posts on Pearl Ridge and Keenan's Ridge observers directed the bombardment of the Japanese positions on the slopes beyond. The firing of the guns, far below at the foot of the Laruma escarpment, could not be heard at Pearl Ridge and the only warning that the Japanese had was the brief whistle of the approaching shells. Partly as a result of the skilful guidance of the native police the patrols killed many Japanese and suffered relatively small losses. The 26th Battalion, the first to do a tour of duty here, suffered its first death in action on January 7 when a patrol led by Lieutenant Davis met an enemy patrol. Private Smith died of wounds and three corporals were wounded as a result, so the hill where the clash occurred was then named Smith's Hill. As the 26th Battalion advanced toward Smith's Hill, Stevenson had assembled Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph Kelly's 31st/51st Battalion at Sipaai by January 7. The strategy involved moving towards Soraken Harbour through extensive inland patrols designed to drive the enemy back to the coastal area, where they could be decisively defeated. Consequently, the main contingent of the 31st/51st began its advance along the coastal route, while a long-range patrol headed inland via Totokei towards Lalum. By January 16, the Australians reached Rakussia without any issues; however, in the following days, they would need to fight their way to Puto, as the flanking force was also advancing towards Kunamatoro. On January 21, the 31st/51st launched an assault on Tsimba Ridge, where the Japanese had set up their primary defensive positions. The determined defenders successfully repelled several attacks over the next few days, prompting the Australians to attempt an outflanking maneuver on January 25, with a company moving inland to cross the Genga River and attack Tsimba from the north. For the next six days, the Japanese launched strong counterattacks against this bridgehead but suffered significant losses. Ultimately, after a heavy artillery bombardment on February 6, the Australians were able to advance to the western end of the northern side of Tsimba, completely encircling the Japanese forces. The following day, the defenders counterattacked but were pushed back, yet they stubbornly held onto their remaining position at the western tip of the ridge. After an air and mortar assault, Tsimba was finally cleared on February 9, as the Japanese retreated towards the harbour during the night. In the subsequent two weeks, the Australians secured Lalum and the Gillman River, while another flanking force took control of Kunamatoro. On February 22, the 31st/51st Battalion was relieved by the 26th Battalion. Subsequently, the 55th/53rd Battalion took over at Pearl Ridge, where it continued to advance along the Numa Numa trail to engage the majority of the 81st Regiment. The nature of the deep patrols may be illustrated by drawing on the report of the one which killed the largest number of Japanese (26 confirmed kills). Lieutenant Goodwin and 10 infantrymen of the 55th/53rd, with an artillery observer (Lieutenant Ford) and his team, a native police boy and 2 native scouts, set out on March 2 to gain topographical information and information about the enemy, and find suitable supply-dropping points. They were out for 5 days. On the first morning they saw signs of a Japanese patrol of 3 some 45 minutes ahead of them and traced their movements. The Australians moved 5400 yards that day. Next morning near the Numa Numa trail one of the natives reported that Japanese were nearby. Goodwin detailed 3 men to block the track and led 3 others in from the side to deal with the enemy. They crept stealthily forward and found 6 Japanese in a lean-to. Goodwin gave each man a target and all 6 of the enemy were killed. While Goodwin was examining the bodies there was a burst of fire from a ridge overlooking them. The Australians withdrew to dead ground, circled the enemy and marched on into his territory, the Japanese fire continuing for 15 minutes after they had gone. They travelled 7600 yards that day. The 4th was spent reconnoitring the area they had then reached. Next day they had moved some 5000 yards on the return journey when scouts reported Japanese round the junction of their native pad and a creek that lay ahead. Goodwin moved the patrol to a ridge overlooking the Japanese and sent 3 men to cover the track to the west. After killing 15 Japanese and throwing 15 grenades into the area, the patrol then moved 700 yards and bivouacked for the night. Next day—the 6th—6 hours of marching brought them back to their starting point. Meanwhile, in the south, Field initiated his own offensive by deploying the 61st Battalion to capture the Kupon-Nigitan-Mosina area, which was successfully taken by February 9. Concurrently, the 25th Battalion advanced along the Tavera despite facing strong resistance, eventually connecting with the 61st Battalion in the Mendai-Sisiruai area. The 9th Battalion also progressed along the Hupai, successfully occupying Makotowa by the end of January and then embarking on a challenging march toward Mosigetta, which was captured on February 16. The following day, a company from the 61st Battalion linked up with the 9th Battalion from the north. Additionally, after quickly securing the Sovele area, the 2/8th Commandos began reconnoitering the Sisiruai-Birosi area on February 2. By February 13, they had established a new base at Opai and discovered that the gardens north of the Puriata River were free of enemy forces. Furthermore, a detached company of the 25th Battalion traveled by barge from Motupena Point to Toko and began pushing inland toward Barara, with the remainder of the battalion expected to arrive shortly to support this advance. However, it is now time to shift focus from Bougainville to the ongoing Burma offensives. Initially, in the north, General Matsuyama's 56th Division began its retreat towards Hsenwi and Lashio, successfully breaching the roadblocks established by the 114th Regiment in late January. Meanwhile, the Mars Task Force struggled to dislodge the determined defenders at Namhpakka. Despite capturing Hpa-pen and executing a clever encirclement against Loikang in early February, they managed to take the ridge only after the Japanese had already completed their withdrawal to Hsenwi on February 4. The 56th Division then focused its efforts on the Lashio region, while the 4th, 55th, and 168th Regiments returned to their original divisions, with the 168th specifically tasked with defending Meiktila. On that same day, the first official convoy from the India-Burma Theater reached Kunming via the Ledo Road, which would later be renamed the Stilwell Road in honor of the individual who initiated this ambitious endeavor. Meanwhile, on February 1, General Festing's 36th Division attempted to cross the Shweli River at Myitson but was met with heavy small arms fire from the Japanese. As a result, the British opted to mislead the enemy, stationing the 72nd Brigade, which included the 114th Regiment, on a small island while the 26th Brigade crossed downstream on February 8, successfully capturing Myitson two days later. In the following days, the 26th Brigade fortified its positions; however, General Naka decided to go on the offensive, deploying his 56th Regiment in increments as it advanced north from Mongmit. Consequently, the 114th and 56th Regiments launched a series of intense counterattacks against the 26th Brigade's foothold, effectively containing the British-Indian forces, although they were unable to push them back across the river. Simultaneously, the Chinese 1st Provisional Tank Group, leading the 30th Chinese Division southward, fought its way to Hsenwi on February 19. The 50th Chinese Division, which crossed the Shweli River without opposition, reached the significant nonferrous Bawdwin mines on February 20. Meanwhile, General Slim continued his Extended Capital offensive, with General Stopford's 33rd Corps advancing towards Mandalay, while General Messervy's 4th Corps quietly maneuvered through the Myittha valley toward the Irrawaddy River in the Chauk-Pakokku region. In early February, Stopford made persistent and determined attempts from the north to seize Mandalay, reinforcing the perception that this was Slim's primary focus. By February 12, General Gracey's 20th Indian Division had also arrived at Allagappa, where the 80th Brigade promptly began crossing the Irrawaddy. In the following days, the British-Indian forces would need to defend this bridgehead against fierce counterattacks from the 33rd Division. Additionally, negotiations began to persuade General Aung San's Burma National Army to join the Allies. In Burma, one man above all others could see the writing on the wall for the Japanese. The Allies received news on January 1 that the Burmese military leader General Aung San and his Burma National Army (BNA) would be prepared to switch sides. An operation by Special Operations Executive (SOE) – codenamed Nation – was launched to liaise with the BNA and the leadership of another group, the Anti-Fascist Organization (AFO), and so facilitate this delicate transfer of loyalties. The first parachute drop of agents was to Toungoo on January 27 and comprised an all-Burma force. It reported that the BNA – or significant parts of it – was ready to turn, but that the AFO needed arming. A team parachuted into Burma on March 20 reported that action by the BNA would begin in a week. At the same time, General Evans' 7th Indian Division was advancing toward the Irrawaddy, aiming to cross the river at Nyaungu. Comprehensive deception tactics, known as Operation Cloak, were implemented to disguise the Nyaungu crossings. The 28th East African Brigade feigned a southward movement to reclaim the Chauk and Yenangyaung oilfields, and dummy parachute drops were carried out east of Chauk to support this ruse. The 114th Indian Brigade also exerted significant pressure on Pakokku to create the impression that crossings were planned there as well. While the 33rd Indian Brigade stealthily approached Nyaungu via Kanhla, the 48th and 63rd Brigades of the 17th Indian Division, reorganized as motorized units, departed from Imphal and began their descent down the Myitha valley. Worried about the enemy buildup near Nyaungu and Pakokkku, General Tanaka opted to send one battalion from the 215th Regiment to bolster defenses in Nyaungu and Pagan. From February 10 to 12, the 114th Brigade successfully captured Pakokku, while the 28th Brigade took control of Seikpyu. Although the 114th Brigade managed to fend off strong enemy counterattacks, elements of the 153rd Regiment recaptured Seikpyu after several days of intense fighting. On the morning of February 14, the 2nd Battalion of the South Lancashire Regiment crossed the Irrawaddy, landing on a beach a mile northeast of Nyaungu and quickly securing the high ground above, followed shortly by the rest of the 33rd Brigade. The next day, the 89th Indian Brigade began crossing the river, with Evans' forces advancing outward and successfully clearing the Nyaungu area by the end of February 16. Meanwhile, to the south, General Christison's 15th Corps continued its offensive in Arakan in early February. General Wood's 25th Indian Division repelled fierce counterattacks from the 154th Regiment, while General Stockwell's 82nd West African Division pursued the retreating Japanese forces. General Lomax's 26th Indian Division chose to bypass the enemy stronghold at Yanbauk Chaung to the northeast, moving swiftly through Sane and engaging some delaying forces at Namudwe. Additionally, due to the perceived weakness in the boundary between the 28th and 15th Armies, General Sakurai had to send the Kanjo Force, centered around the 112th Regiment, to reinforce Yenangyaung. At this point, most of the 2nd Division had also been dispatched to Saigon to stage a coup against the French government in Indochina, leaving Sakurai with only the depleted 49th Division and 16th Regiment in reserve. By 1944, with the war going against the Japanese after defeats in Burma and the Philippines, they then feared an Allied offensive in French Indochina. The Japanese were already suspicious of the French; the liberation of Paris in August 1944 raised further doubts as to where the loyalties of the colonial administration lay. The Vichy regime by this time had ceased to exist, but its colonial administration was still in place in Indochina, though Admiral Jean Decoux had recognized and contacted the Provisional Government of the French Republic led by Charles de Gaulle. Decoux got a cold response from de Gaulle and was stripped of his powers as governor general but was ordered to maintain his post with orders to deceive the Japanese. Instead Decoux's army commander General Eugène Mordant secretly became the Provisional Government's delegate and the head of all resistance and underground activities in Indochina. Following the South China Sea Raid in January 1945, six US navy pilots were shot down but were picked up by French military authorities and housed in the central prison of Saigon for safe keeping. The French refused to give the Americans up and when the Japanese prepared to storm the prison the men were smuggled out. The Japanese then demanded their surrender but Decoux refused, so Lieutenant-General Tsuchihashi Yuitsu, the Japanese commander of the 38th Army, decided to begin preparations for a coup against the French colonial administration in Indochina. As a result, he chose to send the Kamui Detachment, centered around the 55th Cavalry Regiment, to Letpadan to bolster his reserve forces, which also welcomed the arrival of the Sakura Detachment in Prome. Meanwhile, Lomax's troops successfully captured Ramree village on February 8, forcing the Japanese defenders to retreat chaotically to the mainland. The remainder of the month was spent clearing the rest of the island. Consequently, Stockwell was instructed to bypass Kangaw and initiate an advance toward An. However, by February 15, the 154th Regiment had started to withdraw to positions west and north of the Dalet River, while the Matsu Detachment hurried toward Tamandu, the next target for an amphibious assault. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. The battle for Manila was just kicking up. Over 4000 internees at Santo Tomas had been rescued and hard earned victories were being won over the formidable ZigZag Pass. Meanwhile the efforts on Bougainville continued against fierce and stubborn Japanese resistance.
How France's budget cuts will impact development work abroad and civil society at home. An inconclusive medical marijuana experiment leaves patients in limbo. And how Jewish comedian Pierre Dac used humour in the Resistance. The government's budget for 2025, if passed, will see public spending slashed by €32 billion. While most ministries are impacted, funding for public development assistance (PDA) is facing cuts of more than €2 billion – 35 percent of its budget. Coordination Sud, an umbrella group for 180 French non-profit organisations working internationally, say they're being disproportionately hit at a time when international solidarity efforts are needed more than ever. Elodie Barralon, the group's advocacy officer, talks about the impact of such cuts and concerns that civil society is being rolled back in France. (Listen @0')As a three-year experiment with medical marijuana comes to an end, instead of generalising its use, as intended, authorisation has been stalled. Nadine Attal, head of the pain centre at the Ambroise-Paré hospital in Boulogne near Paris addresses the sticking points, which include France's current government chaos and the lack of political will to move forward. She sounds the alarm over the hundreds of patients enrolled in the experiment who have benefited from medical cannabis but whose health is now being ignored. (Listen @20'20'').French humourist Pierre Dac came to fame in the 1930s with a winning brand of absurdist humour that managed to get everyone laughing while ridiculing no one. When WWII broke out he turned his talents to fighting anti-semitism, Hitler, and the collaborationist Vichy regime, joining Free France's Radio Londres in 1943. He also founded a political party that defended the place of laughter and flabbiness in politics. Fifty years after his death, on 9 February 1975, he remains one of France's most popular, and humanist of humourists. (Listen @14'20'')Episode mixed by Cecile Pompeani. Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).
Send us a textWelcome along to another episode of AMP, on this episode we speak to Grant Paling, a triathlete of 11 years but relatively new to agegroup. Grant says"When I was a kid I had big dreams, like most kids do.Astronaut, actor, race car driver - the kind of dreams only an uninhibited child can conjure up, free to think of what might be.One of those dreams was to represent my country. Football, maybe athletics? I was inspired through watching my sporting heroes on tv. And thanks to my dad's love of sport, we watched a lot of it!Those days are now long gone, and I thought those dreams were left behind.When I started triathlon in 2013 I never dreamed of reaching any kind of heights, I just knew I loved it from day one.I played football for 26 years (much of which I spent chasing my first touch) and whilst I achieved some success, triathlon was different. Still part of a team, the amazing Tunbridge Wells Triathlon Club, my other “family”, but now ultimately competing on my own - no team around to do it for me if I didn't perform.But I persevered, inspired by those around me doing incredible things and in 2024, at 41 years old, I travelled to Coimbra in Portugal donning the Great Britain tri suit for the very first time and achieving one of those lifelong dreams by racing in the Middle Distance team for British Triathlon in the European Age Group Championships.I followed that up by competing again for GB in the Standard distance at the European Champs in Vichy in September and despite a bike crash, finished 17th overall.I'm known for my epic race reports within Tunbridge Wells Triathlon Club - I'd love to come on and share some of those experiences over the years and also to talk about how I reached new levels using an AI coaching app to prepare for stepping up to Age Group level, especially being time limited with 2 relatively young kids aged 5 and 7. Game changer!"we had a great chat about, how he juggles being a parent and triathlon and how he implements AI coaching in his training.please enjoy.you can find Grant on Instagram @GRANTPALINGYou Can Follow us onYouTube - AMP GBInstagram @amp_1967Facebook : AMPGBfind all our episodes on our websiteWebsite is : https://agegroupmultisportpodcast.buzzsprout.com/email: agegroupmultisportpodcast@gmail.comIf you are an agegroup athlete and would like to come on the pod, get in touch.
This is an episode for turning points. The year's 1943. The Battle of Stalingrad, where the unstoppable German offensive into Russia was finally stopped and turned around, with Soviet forces essentially fighting forwards to the two remaining, and grim years, of their war with the Nazis. The Battle of the Atlantic reached a peak where Britain looked as though it might actually lose not just that battle but the whole war, when a number of vital technical developments and the release, at last, of some more resources for convoy protection, at last gave them the edge over the U-boats. The man who replaced Auchinleck at the head of the British Eighth Army in North Africa, Bernard Montgomery, though always so cautious that he consistently failed to take advantage of any victory, nonetheless took credit for defeating Rommel because he was in charge at the Second Battle of El Alamein when that success was secured. With hindsight, it's clear that credit should in large part go to Auchinleck for the First Battle which laid the ground for the Second. With Operation Torch landing US and British troops in Morocco and Algeria, the Axis forces were caught in a pincer between them advancing eastward and the Eighth army pushing them westward. They finally surrendered on 13 May 1943. In the meantime, there'd been an ugly quarrel among the French about who should lead the newly liberated territories. Eventually, it would be won by de Gaulle, deservedly, but that was by no means obvious from the start. Finally, the episode gives a little insight into the character of a remarkable Free French general, Philippe de Leclerc, and one unit that came under his command, the Ninth Company of his Second Armoured Division, made up of exiled Republican veterans of Spain's Civil War. We'll be hearing about it, and about him. Illustration: Philippe Leclerc, the Free French general who never compromised with the collaborationist Vichy regime. Music: Bach Partita #2c by J Bu licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License
Maud Perault est infirmière en EHPAD. Elle a initié le concours Miss Grand-Mère en Fête, un événement national qui relie les EHPAD aux écoles de coiffure. Ce concours à pour objectif d'améliorer l'estime de soi en offrant aux résidentes des EHPAD un moment de bien-être et d'évasion, tout en créant des liens intergénérationnels.Fonctionnement du ConcoursLes écoles de coiffure coiffent gratuitement entre 6 et 8 résidentes d'EHPAD.Les résidentes se déplacent dans les salons d'application des écoles.Des photos avant et après la coiffure sont prises et mises en ligne sur une plateforme de vote.Le concours commence le jour de la fête des grands-mères, avec des votes à différents niveaux : établissement, départemental, régional, et national.Participation et ImpactÉdition 2024 : 92 établissements participants.Édition 2025 : 170 établissements participants : éléctions en Mars 2025Editions 2026 : Y participerez vous ?Les écoles de socio-coiffure se joignent au projet, apportant une expertise dans la prise en charge des personnes avec des handicaps.RécompensesLes résidentes et les coiffeurs peuvent gagner des lots tels que des coffrets Lancôme, des crèmes Vichy, des produits L'Oréal, ... Offerts par de nombreux sponsors.Maud recherche des bénévoles pour l'aider, notamment en informatique, ainsi que des sponsors financiers pour soutenir le projet. Les personnes intéressées peuvent la contacter via LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, ou le site Internet du concours : https://missgrandmere.adnm.fr/Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Au village de Reillanne, c'est le jour de la commémoration. On se souvient de la dernière rafle opérée par les autorités de Vichy sur le territoire français en Mai 1944, à la demande des nazis. 54 vies arrachées à l'humanité, internées puis déportées en Pologne pour être exterminées à Auschwitz. À l'heure où les derniers témoins disparaissent, il est plus que jamais nécessaire de raconter avec précision l'histoire de chaque enfant, de chaque femme, de chaque homme assassiné par les nazis parce que juif.C'est le travail minutieux de notre invitée historienne Annette Becker. Dans son livre publié dans la collection Témoins chez Gallimard «Des juifs trahis par leur France 1939-1944», elle sait nous raconter des vies en mots d'amour, en souffrance, en espoir, des vies en croyance de la France patrie des droits de l'homme, des vies jusqu'au bout en résistance. Celles du camp de Reillanne, village du sud de la France dont nous vous partageons la commémoration. Celle du célèbre peintre Otto Freundlich, soutenu jusqu'au bout par son amoureuse Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss, et celle de son grand-oncle Pierre Ignace, raflé le 12 décembre 1941, interné à Compiègne puis déporté à Auschwitz-Birkenau par le convoi N° 1 du 27 mars 1942.De Reillanne, où Daphné Gastaldi s'est rendue en reportage, à Auschwitz, où Cyril Etienne et Guélia Pevnez sont allés interviewer le directeur du Musée d'État Piotr Cywinski, cet épisode de La marche du monde est dédié à la mémoire de chacune des victimes de la Shoah.À lire et à voir pour les 80 ans de la libération du camp d'Auschwitz, le 27 janvier 1945 :- « Des juifs trahis par leur France. 1939-1944 », de l'historienne Annette Becker, spécialisée dans l'étude des deux grandes guerres et des génocides des XXème et XXIème siècles. Collection Témoins-Gallimard. - « Auschwitz. Monographie de l'humain », de Piotr M. A. Cywiński, directeur du musée d'État d'Auschwitz-Birkenau. Publié par Calmann-Lévy et le Mémorial de la Shoah.- « Auschwitz, des survivants racontent », une série documentaire magistrale en 5 épisodes, où l'on découvre 44 récits de survivants, dont la réalisatrice Catherine Bernstein a su faire un grand récit à 44 voix pour l'Histoire. Diffusion lundi 27 janvier 2025 sur France 2 à 21h10.Ressources documentaires : Mémorial de la Shoah Auschwitz-Birkenau : histoire et présentReillanne, une mémoire vivante de la rafle, un reportage de Daphné Gastaldi. Le 12 mai 1944, une des dernières rafles avait lieu en Provence, à Reillanne (Basses-Alpes). Quatre-vingt ans après, une cérémonie a rendu hommage à ces victimes, 54 juifs étrangers d'origine russe, polonaise, tchèque ou germano-autrichienne transférés à Auschwitz. Les noms ont été lus au micro pour leur rendre hommage, lors de la cérémonie. Près de 600 personnes ont été déportées dans ce département. Pourtant, ce camp de Reillanne est méconnu, alors qu'il était dans la constellation du camp des Milles, à Aix-en-Provence. La France était « trouée d'au moins deux cents camps » qui ont contribué au programme génocidaire du Troisième Reich, précise l'historienne Annette Becker dans son dernier livre « Des juifs trahis par leur France – 1939-1944 ».Sur place, le jour de l'inauguration, la résistante et fondatrice de l'association Basses Alpes 39-45 Thérèse Dumont, aidée par son fils, se souvient de l'inauguration de la première plaque il y a 30 ans, à l'époque incomplète et peu accessible au public. Une habitante du village, Anne-Marie Gerbier, se rappelle avec effroi venir en vacances à côté de ce camp et avoir côtoyé les détenus sans savoir, lorsqu'elle était enfant.Pour que l'histoire ne soit pas effacée, des lycéens de Manosque ont fabriqué une plaque commémorative mentionnant clairement cette rafle du 12 mai 1944, sur l'ancien camp d'internement de Notre-Dame-des-Prés, et accessible dès la route pour le public. Leur enseignant d'histoire et coordinateur du projet, David Soulard, nous guide dans l'ancien camp, où il ne reste aucune trace du passé. Au micro de RFI, Annette Becker, et Jan Lambertz, une archiviste américaine qui travaille au fond sur la Shoah de l'USHMM, racontent leurs recherches pour retracer le parcours des anciens détenus. Isabelle Grenut, adjointe à la mairie de Reillanne et historienne de formation, explique les conditions de vie à l'époque dans le camp.
In 1939, incredibly, the British Army still fielded cavalry units that had yet to be mechanised, relying on horses as they prepared for war. When conflict broke out, these regiments—many of them Territorial Army Yeomanry units—were mobilised, with horses being requisitioned to meet the demand. By 1940, the 1st British Cavalry Division was deployed to the Middle East, where they would play a significant role in Operation Exporter, the Allied invasion of Vichy-controlled Syria. Today, I'm joined by Jonathan Washington, author of Fighting Vichy from Horseback: British Mounted Cavalry in Action, Syria 1941, to explore this fascinating chapter of military history. patreon.com/ww2podcast
Capítulo 317: Pedro con este lunes a la tarde, fallecía Jean Mari Le Pen, padre de Marine Le Pen y fundador del Frente Nacional, la ultraderecha francesa. El representante más significativo del resurgimiento del fascismo francés tras la derrota de la Francia colaboracionista de Vichy, dirigida por el Mariscal Petain. Manuel reflexiona sobre los migrantes, no describe más, simplemente quiere ser escuchado.Podéis contactar con nosotros a través de Twitter en @trendingpod https://twitter.com/trendingpod o por correo electrónico a trending@emilcar.fm.
L'équipe du Média vous souhaite une bonne année ! En 2025, nous ne lâcherons rien ! Soutenez-nous :
Jean-Marie Le Pen, co-fondateur du Front national devenu Rassemblement national, est décédé mardi 7 janvier 2025 à l'âge de 96 ans. Le père de Marine Le Pen, connu pour ses nombreuses sorties racistes, antisémites et négationnistes qui lui ont valu plusieurs condamnations en justice, a marqué le débat public français en y popularisant des thématiques d'extrême droite notamment anti-immigration.Retour dans cet épisode de Code Source sur la carrière politique de Jean-Marie Le Pen, le Front national fondé avec d'anciens soutiens du régime de Vichy et de l'Algérie française, qui a gagné en popularité au fil des décennies, avant de passer sous la présidence de Marine Le Pen. Celle-ci finira par exclure son père en 2015 dans une stratégie de « dédiabolisation ». Cet épisode de Code Source est raconté par deux journalistes politiques du Parisien, Alexandre Sulzer et Olivier Beaumont.Écoutez Code source sur toutes les plates-formes audio : Apple Podcast (iPhone, iPad), Amazon Music, Podcast Addict ou Castbox, Deezer, Spotify.Crédits. Direction de la rédaction : Pierre Chausse - Rédacteur en chef : Jules Lavie - Reporter : Barbara Gouy - Production : Thibault Lambert, Clara Grouzis, Pénélope Gualchierotti et Clémentine Spiler - Réalisation et mixage : Julien Montcouquiol - Musiques : François Clos, Audio Network - Archives : INA et Franceinfo. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Rediffusion - On sait que, pour le gouvernement de Vichy, et le maréchal Pétain le premier, l'une des causes de la défaite de 1940 est à chercher dans l'"esprit de jouissance" dont auraient fait preuve les Français depuis le Front populaire. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Nous sommes le 12 juillet 1963, à Aix-en-Provence. Retrouvons Charles Trenet installé à la terrasse d'un restaurant où il déjeune régulièrement. L'ambiance, tranquille, vire soudainement à l'orage lorsqu'un jeune homme l'interpelle violemment. Quelques heures plus tard, le chanteur est arrêté par la police. Interrogé sans ménagement, il est ensuite jeté en prison. De quoi est-il donc accusé ? On lui reproche des « actes impudiques et contre-nature sur mineurs de moins de vingt et un ans ». La presse va alors s'emparer de l'affaire et organiser le scandale en parlant de parties fines. Pédéraste et pédophile, l'amalgame est aussitôt fait dans un pays qui condamne les homosexuels en vertu d'une loi héritée du gouvernement de Vichy. L'auteur de « Y a d'la joie », de « Douce France » ou de « Boum » va, alors, livrer un combat contre la machination dont il est la victime et contre la morale prompte à juger. Retour sur l'affaire Trenet… Invité : Olivier Charneux, auteur de « Le prix de la joie » ; éd Séguier. Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : L'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwL'heure H : https://audmns.com/YagLLiKEt sa version à écouter en famille : La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiKAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
durée : 00:55:58 - Autant en emporte l'Histoire - par : Stéphanie Duncan - Juin 1940. Après une offensive éclair, près de 2 millions de soldats français se retrouvent prisonniers devenant vite un enjeu dans la Collaboration. Tandis que les Allemands monnayent au compte-goutte leur retour Vichy s'engage à former une élite qui devra se mettre au service de l'Europe allemande - invités : Thomas Legrand - Thomas Legrand : Journaliste, éditorialiste. - réalisé par : Anne WEINFELD
Bienvenue dans les Fabuleux Destin, le podcast pour découvrir des histoires vraies et étonnantes. Cette semaine, (re)découvrez l'incroyable histoire du couple Lucie et Raymond Aubrac. Véritable héros de la résistance lors de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Ils ont mené des actions dans le but d'informer les différents groupes résistants français permettant aux forces armées de perdurer pendant l'occupation. Proche de Jean Moulin, et d'autres grands noms de la résistance, ils sont des personnages incontournables de cette période historique. Joignez-vous à nous et revivez ce récit au travers de cette saison. “La dernière colonne” Lucie et Raymond Aubrac ont réussi à rejoindre la Zone Libre. Ils y retrouvent un groupe d'hommes dans un café de Clermont-Ferrand : tous sont bouleversés par la poignée de main de Montoire, qu'ils considèrent comme une trahison impardonnable : ensemble, ils imaginent un engagement clandestin contre Vichy et l'occupation allemande. De Gaulle a été entendu : la Résistance est née… Et ne reculera devant rien. Pour découvrir d'autres récits passionnants, cliquez ci-dessous : [INEDIT] Joseph D. Pistone, le premier infiltré de l'histoire du FBI : immersion dans la mafia New Yorkaise (1/4) [INEDIT] Joseph D. Pistone, le premier infiltré de l'histoire du FBI : nom de code, “Donny Brasco” (2/4) [INEDIT] Joseph D. Pistone, le premier infiltré de l'histoire du FBI : les Bonanno pris au piège (3/4) [INEDIT] Joseph D. Pistone, le premier infiltré de l'histoire du FBI : la tête du “traître” mise à prix (4/4) Un podcast Bababam Originals Ecriture : Clément Prévaux Production : Bababam (montage Joey Daou) Voix : Andréa Brusque Première diffusion le 18 juillet 2024. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jason gives you a quick overview of Fall of the Assad Regime, Part 1.Read the essay here: https://historywiththeszilagyis.org/hwts265 Find us on Twitter:The Network: @BQNPodcasts The Show: @HistorySzilagyi. Chrissie: @TheGoddessLivia. Jason: @JasonDarkElf.Send topic suggestions via Twitter or on our Facebook page History with the Szilagyis.History with the Szilagyis is supported by our patrons:PatiSusan Capuzzi-De ClerckLaura DullKris HillBetty LarsenVince LockeJoin these wonderful supporters by visiting patreon.com/historywiththeszilagyis. The BQN Podcast Collective is brought to you by our listeners. Special thanks to these patrons on Patreon whose generous contributions help to produce this podcast and the many others on our network! You can join this illustrious list by becoming a patron here: https://www.patreon.com/BQN
durée : 00:27:54 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Mathias Le Gargasson, Antoine Dhulster - Une enfance du côté d'Oran, dans les années 1930. L'écrivaine, philosophe et dramaturge Hélène Cixous donnait cinq entretiens pour l'émission "A Voix nue" en 1999. Dans le premier elle se penche sur son enfance algérienne, marquée par le drame de la mort de son père. - réalisation : Thomas Jost - invités : Hélène Cixous Ecrivaine, dramaturge, théoricienne de la littérature
Just how good is Steve McQueen's new film on The Blitz? Was the Vichy government really that bad in 1945? And which general had the best beard? Al Murray and James Holland have a great catch up and answer your questions. A Goalhanger Production Produced by Evan Green & Joey McCarthy Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Social: @WeHaveWaysPod Email: wehavewayspodcast@gmail.com Join our ‘Independent Company' to watch our livestreams, get earlybird tickets and our weekly newsletter - packed with deals. Membership Club: patreon.com/wehaveways Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
David Waldman is back, like Mondays, but more pleasant, except that it is still Monday, with him in it. Greg Dworkin floats in on his Big Raft O'MFG X links! Nope... I won't. Blue Sky, Threads or Daily Kos. Somebody's techwiz has to fix this, not me. You know who's been smelling a little Vichy lately? Never Trumpers, reliable opiate to Dems until D's Lame Duck in Perpetuity term… are now feeling like moving back with their ex... Bye, Felicias. As our country advances to a stage 4, it becomes a bit harder to laugh about it. So then, let's avert our gaze and instead focus on the ridiculous cabinet nominees, brought to you by recess appointments, brought to you by our present, not even future Trump SCOTUS. Lowest hanging fruit in this regard might be considered Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth, although there is recent evidence mounting for hanging him higher. Drugging and raping allegations have surfaced, although Pete himself will tell you that if you drug them first, it isn't rape, and if they were paid to forget, it didn't happen. Pete is filled with Christian goodness; it says so right on his label. The difference between 2016 and 2024 is that this time, the Oval Office orgies will be LIT. Markwayne Mullin used to think Matt Gaetz was a sexual predator but has since evolved to see Matt as more of a sexual colleague. As Health Secretary, RFK Jr. will probably ban synthetics at future White House bacchanals. Bob is against unhealthiness and will be sending anyone he finds hopped up to labor camps.
durée : 00:55:26 - Affaires sensibles - par : Fabrice Drouelle, Franck COGNARD - Aujourd'hui dans Affaires sensibles, l'histoire de Marie-Louise Giraud, dernière femme condamnée à mort en France... et guillotinée en 1943, avec l'accord du Maréchal Pétain. - invités : Florence ROCHEFORT - Florence Rochefort : Chercheuse au CNRS, spécialiste d'histoire des féminismes, des femmes et du genre - réalisé par : Stéphane COSME