Le Soir was founded as a
free advertising newspaper in 1887. Later it became a paying paper. When Belgium was
occupied during the
Second World War,
Le Soir continued to be published under German censorship, unlike many Belgian newspapers which
went underground. The paper, which became known as "Le Soir Volé" (or "Stolen Le Soir"), was parodied by the
resistance group, the ''
Front de l'Indépendance which in 1943 published a satirical pro-Allied edition of the paper, dubbed the "Faux Soir" (or "Fake Soir"), which was mixed with official copies of the paper and distributed to news kiosks in Brussels. The "Stolen Le Soir''" was notable for including
Hergé's
The Adventures of Tintin cartoons in serialized form during the war. The renewed production of the "Free
Le Soir", under Lucien Fuss, restarted on 6 September 1944, just days after the Allied Liberation of Brussels. The publisher of the paper is Rossel company. ==Circulation==