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  1. The host, Robert Evans, is a journalist at Bellingcat, a former editor at Cracked.com and author of the books 'A Brief History of Vice' and 'After the ... I give you: Catholic Priest and Nazi collaborator, Father Robert Alesch, who infiltrated Samuel Beckett's French Resistance cell in WWII, decimating its members. Look at this ...

  2. 28 de mar. de 2019 · Viking; 368 pages; $28. Virago; £20. A S TALES OF wartime derring-do go, it would be hard to beat that of Virginia Hall, a young, one-legged American woman who, in the Gestapo’s view, became ...

  3. Tillion, Germaine (1907—)Pioneering French ethnologist, a student of Algerian desert tribes, who was an early leader in the French Resistance during World War II, survived internment at the Ravensbrück concentration camp, wrote a germinal study of the camp system, and worked for peace during the Algerian War for Independence. Pronunciation: gher-MAYN TEE-YEE-OH.

  4. 25 de dic. de 2023 · Robert Alesch (b. Aspelt, Luxembourg, 1906, d. by firing squad at Fort de Montrouge Arcueil, France, 1949) was a priest and collaborator with Nazi Germany during the Second World War. Alesch was ordained in 1933 and settled in France in 1935. He was named vicar at La VarenneSaintHilaire, parish of

  5. Germaine Guérin. Germaine Guérin was a brothel owner and a French Resistance sympathizer during the Vichy regime. She was part of Virginia Hall 's spy network that operated in Lyons, France. Along with the gynecologist Jean Rousset, she helped Hall save Jews, Allied pilots, spies, radio operators, and refugees during the Second World War.

  6. Introducing Robert Alesch, a character in the book "a Woman of No Importance" Presenter(s) Christelle Jean-Francois . Faculty Mentor. Dr. Kathryn Evans. Abstract or Description. I briefly talk about Virginia's role and I talk about the priest who betrayed her. Comments. Post.

  7. Violette Szabo. Violette Reine Elizabeth Szabo was born in Paris on June 26, 1921. She had lived in Picardy in northern France for over a decade with her aunt before she reunited with her family in London. She continued to live in England, and, in 1940, joined the Women’s Land Army. While in the Army, Violette met Étienne Szabo, a French ...