Originating from Spain refugees interned in Gurs In April 1939, Basques, aviators and International Brigades members were transferred to Gurs. Those arriving from Spain were grouped into four categories (here translated into English): •
Brigadists: They had belonged to the
International Brigades fighting for the
Second Spanish Republic. Due to their nationalities (German, Austrian, Czech, Russians etc), it was not possible for them to return to their countries of origin. Some managed to flee and many others ended up enlisting in the
French Foreign Legion. • Basques: They were
gudaris (
Basque nationalists and other Basque Government battalions) who had escaped from the siege of
Santander and, transferred by sea to the Republican side, had continued fighting outside of their homeland. Due to the proximity of Gurs to their homeland, practically all managed to find local backing that permitted them to abandon the camp and find work and refuge in France. • Airmen: They were members of the ground personnel of the Republican air force. Possessing a mechanical trade, it was easy for them to find French businessmen who gave them work, allowing them to leave the camp. • Spaniards: They were farmers and had trades that were in low demand. They had no one in France who was interested in them. They were a burden for the French government and therefore they were encouraged, in agreement with the Francoist government, to return to Spain. The great majority did so and were turned over to the Francoist authorities in
Irún. From there they were transferred to the
Miranda de Ebro camp for purification according to the
Law of Political Responsibilities. From 1939 to the autumn of 1940, the language that dominated in the camp was Spanish. The inmates created an orchestra and constructed a sports field. On July 14, 1939,
Bastille Day, the 17,000 internees of Spanish origin arranged themselves in military formation in the sports field and sang
La Marseillaise, followed by sports presentations and choral and instrumental concerts. German members of the International Brigade edited a newspaper in German by the name of "Lagerstimme K.Z. Gurs" of which there were more than 100 editions. The inhabitants of neighboring places could come to the camp and sell food to the inmates. For a time, the commander permitted some imprisoned women to rent a horse and cart and let them leave to camp to buy provisions more economically. There was a postal service and visits were also occasionally permitted.
"Undesirables" At the start of World War II, the French government decided to use the camp also to house ordinary prisoners and citizens of enemy countries. The first contingent of these arrived at Gurs May 21, 1940, eleven days after the German government initiated its western campaign with the invasion of
the Netherlands. To the Spaniards and Brigadists who still remained in the camp, were added: • Germans who were found in France, without regard to ethnicity or political orientation, as foreign citizens of an enemy power. Among them stands out a significant number of
German Jews who had fled the
Nazi regime. • Citizens of countries who were in the orbit of the Reich, like
Austria,
Czecho-
Slovakia,
Fascist Italy, or
Poland. • French activists of the
left (
trade unionists,
socialists,
anarchists, and especially,
communists), who were considered dangerous under the
Molotov–Ribbentrop pact; the first of these arrived 21 June 1940, and the majority were relocated in other camps before the end of the year. • Pacifists who refused to work in the war industry. • Representatives of the French extreme right who sympathized with the Nazi regime. • Ordinary prisoners evacuated from prisons in the north of the country ahead of the German advance. • Prisoners waiting trial for common crimes. In contrast to the Spaniards, for whom there was generally sympathy, the internees from the second waves were known as "
les indésirables", the undesirables.
Regime de Vichy With the
armistice between France and Germany in June 1940, the region in which the camp was situated formed part of the territory governed by the Vichy government, passing over to the civil authority. The military commander, before turning over command, burned the records in order to make it difficult for the new French government to locate and persecute many of the inmates who, informed of the change in command, had fled, disappearing among the French population who gave them shelter. After the war, the destruction of the records later made it difficult for many ex-prisoners to claim the compensation that was due to them for having been incarcerated. Seven hundred of the prisoners, interned on account of their nationality or for being sympathetic to the Nazi regime, were released between August 21—the date of the arrival of the inspection commission sent by the German government to Gurs—and October. The Vichy government incarcerated: • political dissidents. • Jews who were not French nationals, also German Jews who escaped to France in 1930s; among those were
Marion Wiesel and her family and Emilio Kerbel,the father of
Mireille Knoll. • German Jews deported by the
SS from Germany. • persons who had illegally crossed the border of the zone occupied by the Germans. • Spaniards fleeing
Francoist Spain. • Spaniards who had already been in the camp, released in the fall of 1940, roamed around the country unemployed. • Spaniards coming from other camps that had been condemned for being uninhabitable or due to their scarce contingent. •
stateless persons. • people involved in prostitution • homosexuals. •
Gypsies. • indigents.
Jews deported from Baden and commemorates the Nazi regime deportees The most painful period in the camp's history began in October 1940. The Nazi
Gauleiter ("governor") from the
Baden region of Germany,
Josef Bürckel, had also been named
Gauleiter of the neighboring French region of
Alsace. In Baden resided some 7,500 Jews; they were mainly women, children, and the elderly, given that the young and middle-aged men had emigrated (official Nazi policy, overseen and made more efficient by
Adolf Eichmann) or had gone to the
Nazi concentration camps. The
Gauleiter received word that the camp at Gurs was mostly empty, and on October 25, 1940, it was decided to evacuate the Jews from Baden (between 6,500 and 7,500) to Gurs as part of
Operation Wagner-Bürckel. There, they remained locked up under French administration. The living conditions were difficult, and illness rife, especially
typhus and
dysentery. The deportation of the German Jews to Gurs in October 1940 is a unique case in the history of
the Holocaust. On the one hand, it deals with the only deportation of Jews carried out toward the west of Germany by the Nazi regime. On the other hand, the
Wannsee conference in which the above-mentioned extermination program was delineated, did not take place until January 1942. == Camp Gurs today ==