French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday waded into controversy by praising a general who helped win World War I, but became a top Nazi collaborator in World War II — comments that triggered outrage among French Jews.
Marshal Philippe Petain’s name appears alongside seven other top military chiefs to be honored tomorrow in a ceremony at the Invalides monument, the site of Napoleon’s tomb, to mark the centenary of the end of World War 1.
Touring battlefields ahead of a formal commemoration of the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the war, Macron said Petain was worthy of the honor for his leading role in the World War I victory.
“Marshal Petain was also a great soldier during World War I” even though he made “fatal choices during the Second World War,” Macron said in the northern French town of Charleville-Mezieres.
The stop was part of a week-long tour that included Verdun, France, which Petain defended against a German onslaught.
Petain led the French army to victory in Verdun in 1916, but gained infamy and a conviction for treason for his actions as leader of Vichy France from 1940 to 1944. He is despised for his complicity in the Holocaust.
“I pardon nothing, but I erase nothing of our history,” Macron added.
The French presidency later said that only the five top military chiefs who are interred in the Invalides are to be individually honored and have their names cited in the ceremony — not including Petain.
Macron would not attend the military ceremony.
The 40-year-old French president, sliding in polls, is gaining a reputation for making awkward or shocking statements. In September, he told a young out-of-work gardener that he need only “cross the street” to find a job.
However, Wednesday’s remarks struck a deep chord in a nation that has lived through two world wars and only in recent decades has acknowledged its collaborationist past.
Former French president Jacques Chirac admitted in 1995 that Petain’s Vichy government, which collaborated with the Nazis, was the French state.
Chirac spoke at the Vel d’Hiv cycling stadium in Paris, known for a 1942 roundup of French Jews that saw 13,000 people deported to Nazi concentration camps, a third of them children.
The leading Jewish organization in France, known by the initials CRIF, issued a searing criticism of Macron’s stance.
“I am shocked by this statement by Macron,” CRIF president Francis Kalifat said. “Petain was the person who allowed the deportation of 76,000 French Jews to death camps. Petain signed the [law on] the status of Jews that meant Jews were excluded from public functions, education and forced to wear the Jewish star.”
French politicians voiced outrage and a sense of weariness at Macron’s repeated gaffes, with far-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon capturing the sense of indignity.
“Macron, this time, it’s too much. The History of France isn’t your toy,” Melenchon tweeted. “This anti-Semitic traitor cannot be amnestied by the caprice of Macron.”
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