The Children's Front
The Story of an Orphanage in Wartime France
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
This story is a true one about an orphanage—Refuge des Petits—in France during World War II. Here, a privileged American man struggled to establish a refuge for desperate children. This shelter provided needy, displaced youngsters with a worthy place in the world—while he found his own.
The Refuge would flourish. It played a leading role in what became known as the Children's Front. This book is full of inspiring stories of resilience, generosity, and hope from the staff and youngsters who made the Refuge their home in the early 1940s and later.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Parkes (Disrupter) reveals in this approachable narrative the previously undocumented story of philanthropist and humanitarian Seymour Houghton (1906–1998). Born to "patrician" parents in Connecticut, Houghton studied politics and economics at the École Libre des Sciences Politiques in Paris. While working as a political writer in France in the late 1930s, Houghton established an orphanage for refugee children near Marseilles. Called the Refuge de Petis, the sanctuary had originally been a gorgeous stone and stucco hotel, and was surrounded by "tree filled gardens." The children—whose parents were in Nazi concentration camps, fighting for the Allies, or had simply been separated from their children in the masses of refugees fleeing from France and elsewhere—were cared for and, unusually, educated in civics, with lessons on loyalty, politics, and leadership. Convinced that the U.S. was on the verge of entering the war, and fearful of arrest as an enemy citizen in Nazi-aligned Vichy France, Houghton returned to America in September 1941. There he worked to raise funds for the orphanage, now led by his future wife, Germaine M. Perret. The Refuge continued to operate after the war, and by 1966, more than 500 children had lived there since its founding. With its poignant descriptions of daily life in the orphanage (including sun-drenched days at the beach and the staff's endless quest to procure enough food for everyone), this is a worthwhile account of a forgotten moment of history. (Self-published)