Chapter 503: Sinful Love
Well, when Britain and the United States helped France to defeat Germany, these shameful deserter men came back.
Then he began to scold women, saying that it was a shame for France that these women were intemperate. This is simply shameless, the army fed by the common people with countless money and food, fleeing without a fight, surrendering without a fight, and as a result, all the mistakes and responsibilities have to be borne by unarmed women, which is extremely shameless.
Very shameful for such behavior and such people.
The tragedy continues, and it does not end with the humiliation of their mother, the tragedy continues to the German-French illegitimate children, who live with curse and discrimination for the rest of their lives.
Whether it is the children of German soldiers and French women, or the children of French laborers and German women, they are all children born with the imprint of shame in the eyes of the people, and their childhoods without exception have experienced humiliation, discrimination, abuse and even beatings because they are seen as the children of the enemy.
It's sinful love, and for most people, the memory of war should be hunger, resistance, and fear. But Paris under German control was a 'big hybrid'. ”
After the defeat of France, two million men were imprisoned in concentration camps, but French women were active at this time, sleeping with German soldiers stationed there and sleeping with any man who could help them through economic hardship. War is like an aphrodisiac that stimulates erotic desires, and even the founder of the feminist movement, the famous writer Simone? Beauvoir once said that she had an "unconscious friendship" for the invaders; The Germans' "worship of the body" made her feel smitterized.
There was once a legend that during the fall of Paris. The high-class brothels in Paris welcomed the German army, and 1/3 of the brothels in the city were reserved for their exclusive use; Another 100,000 Parisian women became "temporary prostitutes".
The pleasure hunt has been accompanied by a sharp increase in the birth rate in France, and many German-French illegitimate children have been born in just over a year. Of course, not all German-French bastards were the result of pleasure and trade, and most of them were convinced that their father and mother had a great love that crossed the boundaries of war.
Jayne lives in Amiens, a small city in France, and he is a native of Amiens, and he has never left Amiens, just as he has never doubted the love of his parents. Jayne's father was a German officer stationed in Amiens, and Jayne's French mother was sent to take care of his father's diet and daily life.
In getting along day and night. The young German officer and the French girl fell in love. and gave birth to Jay in early 1941. Jayne's mother recalled that her German husband loved her and her children so much that when he was evacuated from France, he promised to come back and live with them as soon as possible, even though he never returned. Because his father died in battle.
In that special era. Transnational romances are not to be celebrated. Falling in love with an enemy is a dangerous crime. After the end of World War II, those French women who had romances with German soldiers were punished to varying degrees. According to recent estimates made by researchers, about 100,000 people were punished at the time. One million people were questioned and questioned, and 50,000 women were shaved and stripped naked and paraded through the streets.
And in Germany, in 1940, the Gestapo issued a decree that "all Frenchmen, including Poles, who have had sexual relations with German women shall be sentenced to death." However, this decree did not stop the love between the French laborer and the German woman.
Due to the needs of the war, almost all young German men were sent to the front lines of the war. At the same time, in order to supply battlefield materials, German factories needed a large number of young and middle-aged laborers. As a result, Germany had to transport large numbers of foreign prisoners of war and laborers, including the French, Poles, and Russians, to Germany for forced productive labor. By 1945, France alone had provided Germany with a total of three million laborers and prisoners of war, and these French laborers had left thousands of German-French illegitimate children in Germany.
Jean, who is nearly 90 years old? Louis? To this day, Gharon is so excited when he recalls his labor experience in Germany. Unlike prisoners of war, as laborers, let? Louis? Gharon could walk the streets of Berlin, and he even had a small salary that allowed him to sit in a café and drink coffee, so he had the opportunity to interact and talk with German women.
Of course, it is not completely without restrictions, but this restriction makes young people's love more interesting. Let? Louis? Gharon fell in love with a German woman in Berlin when he was only twenty years old. Shortly after the birth of their child, Germany was defeated, and at the end of World War II, he was repatriated to France, along with other laborers, never to return.
The birth of all the world's children should be celebrated, but the birth of these German-French illegitimate children during World War II was accompanied by a curse because they were evidence of family and national shame. In both Germany and France, almost all World War II illegitimate children experienced a lonely and isolated childhood.
According to the German-French illegitimate son Josian? Cruy recalls that at the age of seven, she first realized that she was different from other children because her classmates called her a "German bastard." Throughout her childhood, she was filled with white eyes, insults, and rejections, no child wanted to accept her as her friend, and in her long lonely childhood, she could only fantasize about her father being a hero or a god to talk to and masturbate.
Klaus? Peter? Nichol never knew he was half French, until he was fifty years old when he received a letter from a stranger to his aunt by blood. In the letter, his aunt told him that he was the son of a French laborer and a German woman, and that his mother had given him up for adoption in order to escape gossip.
Since then, all the alienation and roughness he had encountered in his childhood have been justified, and he begins to look for his father, but it is not an easy task. Because even after so many years, the elders around him still think that his existence is a shame.
Genein, founder of the War Children National Mutual Aid Society? At the age of thirteen, Nivova understood many things, why her birth certificate said "father unknown", why her maternal grandfather did not like her, why her classmates and neighbors looked down on her. This was not only because her mother was a single mother, but more importantly because her father was a German soldier.
In the here and now, tens of thousands of French women who "collaborated directly with the enemy" were shaved and paraded through the streets, while their children were abandoned, adopted, or raised by themselves but brutalized.
Gérald? Periox's mother was lucky enough to escape the parade and all kinds of abuse, but she never escaped the shame of being in love with the Germans. As a result, the child became the object of her anger. Mr. Periox, now 63, recalls that his mother beat him almost every day, made him sleep in a cramped storage room, and that his mother and stepfather even forced him to eat fleas. His mother never told him who his biological father was, and as soon as Periox asked this question, his mother yelled at him, "It's none of your business"! (To be continued......)