
After the Vichy government was established in June 1940, André Trocmé, a committed pacifist, embarked on a campaign of peaceful civil disobedience against the authorities. Most Huguenots in the area refused to cooperate with the Vichy government, refused to take an oath to Marshal Pétain (chief of state of the Vichy regime), and refused to ring church bells in his honor. On the Vivarais Plateau, the collective memory of their own suffering as a religious minority created a strong suspicion of authoritarian governments. Many in Le Chambon regarded the Jews as a “chosen people” and, when they escorted those who were endangered 300 kilometers to the Swiss border, the guides were aware that they were following the same route that their persecuted Huguenot brethren had traveled centuries earlier. As Huguenot (Calvinist) Protestants, they had been persecuted in France by the Catholic authorities from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries and later provided shelter to fellow Protestants escaping discrimination and persecution. The history of Le Chambon and its environs influenced the conduct of its residents during the Vichy regime and under German occupation. Until November 1942, it lay in the Unoccupied Zone of France. Le Chambon-sur-Lignon is a village on the Vivarais Plateau in the Haute-Loire départment of the Auvergne, a hilly region of south-central France. These actions of rescue were unusual during the period of the Holocaust insofar as they involved the majority of the population of an entire region. They forged identification and ration cards for the refugees, and in some cases guided them across the border to neutral Switzerland. Led by Pastor André Trocmé of the Reformed Church of France, his wife Magda, and his assistant, Pastor Edouard Theis, the residents of these villages offered shelter in private homes, in hotels, on farms, and in schools.

This number included about 3,000–3,500 Jews who were fleeing from the Vichy authorities and the Germans. They just accepted each of us, taking us in with warmth, sheltering children, often without their parents-children who cried in the night from nightmares." -Elizabeth Koenig-Kaufman, a former child refugee in Le Chambonįrom December 1940 to September 1944, the inhabitants of the French village of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon (population 5,000) and the villages on the surrounding plateau (population 24,000) provided refuge for an estimated 5,000 people.

Nobody asked who your father was or if you could pay. "Nobody asked who was Jewish and who was not.
