{"id":194,"date":"2009-08-27T10:50:35","date_gmt":"2009-08-27T08:50:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.maille.fr\/?page_id=194"},"modified":"2011-07-28T07:13:49","modified_gmt":"2011-07-28T05:13:49","slug":"maille-history","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.maille.fr\/maille-history\/","title":{"rendered":"Maill\u00e9 History"},"content":{"rendered":"
Maill\u00e9 is a village in southern Indre-et-Loire, in Touraine, with 660 inhabitants.
\nIt is located 40 km south of Tours, along the Paris-Bordeaux rail line. The road connecting Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine and Nou\u00e2tre crosses the village. National Route 10, 3 km to the east, provides easy access.<\/p>\n
In 1940, when the Germans moved into Maill\u00e9 and its environs, the commune had just over 500 inhabitants.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/a><\/p>\n On August the 25th, 1944, as Paris was celebrating its Liberation, Maill\u00e9 was nearly wiped off the map. At around 9 a.m. German troops surrounded the village, and thus began the first moments of a tragedy that cannot be justified by any military objective. At the same time that Parisians were joyfully celebrating their freedom from occupation, the inhabitants of Maill\u00e9 were being hunted down and massacred in their fields, their homes, their gardens, their cellars\u2026 <\/a><\/p>\n The butchery lasted all morning, creating orphans who would be marked for life by the event. Indeed, how could they possibly forget? How could they possibly come to terms with grief over the event in the absence of \u201csatisfaction\u201d from seeing the perpetrators of this horrible crime brought to justice? Indeed, the Permanent Military Tribune of Bordeaux found only Second Lieutenant Gustav Shlueter responsible for willful homicide \u201cconducted at the time under the pretext of a state of war, but without justification by law or by custom of war.\u201d Unfortunately, he has never been found and the troops under his command on August 25th, 1944, have not yet been identified. The inhabitants of Maill\u00e9 have ever since that day been living with the memory of this barbarous act, and they have never joined the rest of France in celebrating the August 25th, 1944, Liberation of the Capital.<\/p>\n August 25th is a time of joyful remembrance in Paris each year; while the rest of the country remains virtually unaware that in Maill\u00e9 it is instead a time to pay respect to the dead and to remember the most unspeakable moment of the village\u2019s history.<\/p>\n Today, no physical trace of this bloody history remains, and Maill\u00e9 suffers from the lack of national recognition. Despite the importance of this tragedy, the history of the village relating to the 25th of August, 1944, is still not widely known, even by people working on the history of World War II.<\/p>\n
\n124<\/strong> persons, ranging in age from 3 months to 89 years, were brutally slaughtered. They included 37 men, 39 women, 48 children under the age of 15, 26 of whom were less than 5 years of age, and two new-born babies. The only ones who escaped death were those able to hide before the arrival of the Germans and those who were able to feign death as they lay amid the cadavers. Farm animals were not spared either. Anything that moved on that day was killed. At the conclusion of this Nazi atrocity, 52 houses were burnt. Only 8 out of 60 houses stood after nazis passed through the village.
\n<\/a><\/p>\n
\n<\/a><\/a><\/p>\n