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    The Memoirs of André Trocmé

    The Memoirs of André Trocmé

    The Pastor Who Rescued Jews


    Edited by Patrick Cabanel
    Translated by Patrick Henry and Mary Anne O’Neil

    Coming in September 2025: André Trocmé’s personal memoirs reveal the formative experiences that led him to stand up to Nazis, save Jews, and become an international peacemaker.


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    Available Formats:
    Softcover

    About The Book

    André Trocmé is famous for his role in saving thousands of Jews from the Nazis as pastor of the village of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, France, a story celebrated in literature and film. But who was the man behind the legend, and the how did he become an international hero and uncompromising advocate of nonviolence resistance? Appearing in English for the first time, his private memoirs give a colorful and honest account of a person determined to stay true to his faith and convictions, who despite his quirks was ready to stand his ground when world history came knocking.

    Written for his children in the 1950s and first published in French in 2020, these memoirs trace André Trocmé’s extraordinary life: a bourgeois childhood; teenage years as a World War I refugee; studies abroad in New York City, where he met his future wife, Magda, and tutored the Rockefeller children; military service in Algeria, which cemented his pacifist stance; postings as a pastor in depressed areas of France; resisting fascism and hiding Jews in Le Chambon; a brief imprisonment and a stint underground; and globetrotting leadership in the International Fellowship of Reconciliation. Trocmé also reveals the impact of personal tragedies: the untimely death of his mother in a car accident for which his father was responsible and, years later, his teenage son’s suicide.

    This detailed first-person account from an eyewitness to pivotal moments in history will be of interest not just to scholars of the Holocaust, World War II, and domestic resistance to fascism, but also to those seeking to follow their conscience and the teachings of their faith in trying times. 

    Editor
    Patrick Cabanel, a professor at École Pratique des Hautes Études, is a French historian specializing in the history of religious minorities and French resistance to the Holocaust. 

    Translators
    Patrick Henry is professor emeritus of philosophy and literature at Whitman College. He is the author of five books. Mary Anne O’Neil is professor emerita of French, Spanish, and world literature at Whitman College. She is married to Patrick Henry.

     

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    Table of Contents

    • Editor’s Introduction (Patrick Cabanel)
    • 1. Childhood
    • 2. The Family
    • 3. The First World War & The German Occupation of Saint-Quentin
    • 4. Forced Exil into Belgium
    • 5. Paris, the School of Theology
    • 6. In the Army
    • 7. Paris
    • 8. The United States
    • 9. Pastoral Ministry in the Working-Class North: Maubeuge
    • 10. Pastoral Ministry in the Working-Class North: Sin-Le-Noble
    • 11. Le Chambon-Sur-Lignon
    • 12. 1939-1940
    • 13. City of Refuge
    • 14. Imprisonment in Saint-Paul-D’eyjeaux
    • 15. Mounting Violence and Internal Exile
    • 16. Liberation
    • 17. The Collège Cévenol after the War
    • 18. The European House of Reconciliation in Versailles
    • 19. Unfinished Conclusion
    • Epilogue to the French Edition (Patrick Cabanel)