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The children of the château de la Hille
After a week traveling through France along with thousands of other refugees from the North, the children arrived in the hamlet of Seyre, near to Nailloux in the department of Haute Garonne, and were lodged in a large barn belonging to the farm of the Chateau de Seyre. There was no furniture or beds and little to eat. The winter of 1940 was very harsh and there was much illness and suffering. Fortunately, the Secours Suisse aux Enfants, a sub-sector of the Red Cross of Switzerland, agreed to provision the young refugees' camp and began to supply clothing and basic needs. The following spring this Swiss organisation, directed by Mr. Maurice Dubois, arranged the transfer of the camp to the Chateau de la Hille near Pamiers in Ariège. At the time it was a very neglected building and the older boys set to work digging wells and latrines to make the old chateau habitable. In the summer of 1941, through the intervention of the American Friends Service Committee (Quakers), 20 of the youngest children were brought to the United States and two others were saved by relatives in America.
Thanks to the efforts of their Swiss and French protectors, and especially to their "débrouillard" spirit, nearly 90 of the 100 girls and boys survived the war and settled all over the world. At least 55 of them are still alive and have reunited several times in Israel, France and the US. The last reunion took place in Toulouse and at the sites of the former camps in Ariège and the Haute Garonne on Sept. 15-19, 2000. At that time, a memorial to the children of la Hille, situated at the entrance to the chateau grounds, was inaugurated. |