01.25.2021 - By Ian Elsner
During World War II, a Nazi collbatoring regime governed the south of France, and the city of Toulouse was a Resistance hub. The Vichy Government promoted anti-Semitism and collaborated with the Nazis, most specifically by deporting Jews to concentration and extermination camps. Fragmented Resistance fighters organized to form escape networks and build logistics chains to sabotage and disrupt the regime.
In 1977, former Resistance members created a community museum in Toulouse about their experience. Today, that museum is called the Museum of Resistance and Deportation in Haute-Garonne, France, and is run by the regional government. Museum director Jérôme Blachon is reimagining how the museum tells the story of the French Resistance as the people who experienced firsthand pass away.
In this episode, Blachon describes the challenge of presenting the fragmented nature of the resistance to a modern audience, the 2020 renovation of the museum, and his focus on transmitting precious memories.
Topics and Notes
00:00 Intro
00:15 Memorials in Toulouse
01:00 Toulouse During World War II
01:32 Jérôme Blachon, Director of the Museum of Resistance and Deportation in Haute-Garonne, France
02:20 "Engage, Collect, Transmit"
02:50 France During Nazi Germany's Administration
03:38 Museum Archipelago Ep. 51
04:08 Presenting the Difference Forms of Resistance in the Museum
05:25 2020 Renovation
05:35 The Disappearance of the Last Witnesses
06:26 The Museum as Transmission
06:45 Outro | Join Club Archipelago