Television • The story of Oradour-sur-Glane was featured in the 1973–74 British documentary television series
The World at War, narrated by
Laurence Olivier. The first and final episodes (1 and 26, entitled "A New Germany" and "Remember" respectively) show helicopter views of the destroyed village, interspersed with pictures of the victims that appear on their graves. • The massacre is referenced in the 2010 series
World War II in Colour in the episode "Overlord", which aired on 7 January 2010. It was also featured in part 2 of ''Hitler's Death Army'', which aired on 27 November 2015, and showed both images from the time along with the ruins as they are today. • The 2024 PBS documentary "Village of Death: Oradour-sur-Glane 1944" describes the massacre narrated by
Jeff Daniels.
Film • The 1963 Czechoslovak film
Ikarie XB-1 references the massacre, with a character referring to a crew of humans from the 20th century as “
human trash, that left Auschwitz, Oradour, Hiroshima behind them.” • The 1975 French film
Le vieux fusil, is based on these facts. • The 1989 British film
Souvenir, is based on the massacre. In the film, an ex-German soldier returns as an American to Oradour-sur-Glane where he participated in atrocities committed by the Nazis, during which his then French lover was murdered. The film is based on the book
The Pork Butcher by
David Hughes published in 1984 . • A feature film,
Une Vie avec Oradour, was released in September 2011 in France.
Literature • In the 1947 Russian novel
The Storm by
Stalin Prize-winner
Ilya Ehrenburg, there is a fictionalized detailed description of the massacre (part vi, chapter a), citing the actual place and the actual SS unit responsible. The novel was published in English in 1948 by the Foreign Languages Publishing House in Moscow, and in 1949 by Gaer Associates of New York. • In 1984,
David Hughes published
The Pork Butcher, a novel based on the massacre of the inhabitants of Oradour-sur-Glane and the subsequent memorialisation of the razed village. The book was made into a film titled
Souvenir in 1989. • In
The Hanging Garden (1998) by
Ian Rankin,
Detective Inspector John Rebus investigates a suspected war criminal accused of leading the massacre of the fictional village of Villefranche d'Albarede, based on Oradour-sur-Glane. • The poet
Gillian Clarke,
National Poet of Wales, commemorates the massacre at Oradour-sur-Glane in two poems from her 2009 collection
A Recipe for Water, "Oradour-sur-Glane" and "Singer". • In 2013,
Helen Watts published
One Day in Oradour, a short novel based on the events of 1944. Some names of the characters and locations have been changed, and some characters are composites of several individuals. • In 2015,
Ethan Mordden published
One Day in France, a short novel based on the events of 1944. Covering a twenty-four-hour period and moving back and forth between Oradour and nearby Limoges, the story fits invented characters into the historical record. • The plot of
The Alice Network, a 2017
historical novel by American author
Kate Quinn, incorporates a reference to the massacre. Real-life survivor Marguerite Rouffanche appears as a minor character.
Music •
Silent Planet's 2014 song "Tiny Hands (Au Revoir)" describes the massacre in Oradour-sur-Glane through the eyes of Madame Marguerite Rouffanche, the sole survivor of the church massacre.
Musical • In 2015, the German musical
Mademoiselle Marie by Fritz Stiegler (script) and Matthias Lange (music) covered the hostile sentiments of Oradour descendants to Germans in a post-war love story of 1955. Visitors from Oradour to an outdoor performance in front of
Cadolzburg Castle (Bavaria) praised it as "a message of reconciliation and tolerance". In 2017, a French audience in the new village of Oradour-sur-Glane enthusiastically applauded performances by the same (mostly) amateur troupe, which received praise as an act of international understanding. ==See also==