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Denise Siekierski
Denise Sikirski née Caraco was
born in 1924 in Marseilles, France—an only child raised by her
grandparents. At age 11, she joined the Jewish Scouts’ youth
movement and in August 1942, as a Scout troop leader, she received
her first assignment with the Jewish underground: caring for four
young female refugees and placing them in prearranged hiding places.
From then on, Denise and other Scout leaders became active in
locating hideouts for Jews, facilitating illegal border crossings to
Switzerland, distributing forged documents, and smuggling weapons,
money, food, and ration coupons.
In November 1942, following the German
occupation of Vichy France, the activities of the Scouts and other
Jewish organizations went underground. Denise begged her family to
leave Marseilles for a safe haven and gave them false documents. Yet
their escape was delayed; the Germans carried out a mass aktion
in Marseilles at the end of January 1943, closing off the old city
near the port and conducting a door-to-door search for illegal
aliens. More than 1,000 Jews were sent to Drancy detention camp and
then to death camps, and the old city was heavily bombarded.
Denise’s family survived and escaped soon after with the help
of a wealthy French friend. Denise remained in Marseilles and
continued with her underground activities.
One day, a German Jew informed the
Gestapo of the clandestine activities of Denise and Pastor Lemaire—a
Protestant minister who collaborated and aided the Jews.
Consequently, two innocent bystanders were arrested. After receiving
a tip about the informant, Josef Bass (A.K.A.“Monsieur Andre”) —a
fellow member of the Jewish resistance—warned Denise, who escaped to
Grenoble. She begged Lemaire to follow, but his conscience forbade
him to have others punished in his stead, so he turned himself in.
Lemaire was arrested, jailed, sent to Mauthausen, and later
Birkenau, but he survived. In 1976 he was recognized by Yad Vashem
as a Righteous Among the Nations.
Following her escape, Denise served as a
contact between Grenoble, Nice, and Marseilles. In early June 1943,
she returned to Marseilles and came into contact with Monsieur
Andre. He told her he had established an underground rescue network
and asked her to join him. Following an unsuccessful rescue
operation in Nice, Denise and Monsieur Andre set out for Chambon—a
village whose residents hid thousands of Jews and were later
recognized as Righteous Among the Nations. There, they helped
further the partisan branch of the Maquis movement (the French armed
underground) and Denise helped smuggle in weapons and aided
underground operations until the war’s end.
Denise’s mother and aunt survived the
war. After moving to Paris, Denise met Zeilig Siekierski whom she
married in 1946. The following year they made aliyah. Denise
has two children, three grandchildren, and one great-granddaughter. |