(1915) The modern
La Libre traces its origins to the
Le Patriote newspaper, founded by Victor and Louis Jourdain in 1884. Politically, the newspaper supported the dominant centre-right
Catholic Party. After the
German invasion of Belgium in
World War I,
Le Patriote was banned by the
German occupation authorities. In February 1915, however, it was re-founded in secret by the Jourdain brothers as an
underground newspaper called
La Libre Belgique ("Free Belgium"). The new title was an allusion to a collaborationist paper called
La Belgique ("Belgium"). A total of 171 issues of
La Libre Belgique appeared during the occupation. It soon became famous as an example of Belgian resistance. Several weeks before the end of the hostilities, both of the Jourdain brothers died of natural causes. Their work was continued by Victor’s two sons Joseph and Paul Jourdain. The newspaper
was also published secretly in
German-occupied Belgium during
World War II in a number of unofficial editions. The largest, known as the
La Libre Belgique of
Peter Pan (after the fictional editor's name given on the
masthead) achieved a circulation of 10,000 to 30,000 copies. 85 bi-monthly issues were published. After the war,
La Libre Belgique supported the mainstream
Christian Social Party and, until 1999, the paper had a strong
Christian Democratic stance. Currently the newspaper has a
centrist editorial policy. ==
La Libre today==