Jean Moulin was a major figure of the French Resistance during World War II
@an Emblem of the Resistance, Life Achievements and Life
Jean Moulin was a major figure of the French Resistance during World War II
Jean Moulin born at
He married Marguerite Cerruti in September 1926 but this union did not last long and the couple divorced in 1928.
He was a major figure in the French resistance and after his capture at the hands of the Gestapo he was brutally tortured. But being a man of conviction, he refused to reveal any vital information to his captors. He died in a train while being taken to Germany on 8 July 1943 either from injuries sustained during the torture or by committing suicide. The real cause of his death could not be ascertained.
He achieved legendary status as a hero of the Resistance upon his death; he is revered as a true patriot and a man of great courage and fortitude. Numerous schools, colleges, streets and squares are named after him in France.
Jean Moulin was born on 20 June 1899 in Béziers, France. His father Antonin Moulin was a professor of history and was a staunch Republican. His father also served as the president of local chapter of League of Rights of Men (La Ligue des Droits de l'Homme) and was actively involved in the local Radical Socialist Party.
Jean had one brother and one sister, and the children had a peaceful and comfortable childhood. Under his father’s influence he too developed strong Republican convictions.
In 1917 he enrolled at the Law Institute of Montpellier, and started working at the prefecture of the Hérault.
He drafted into the French Army in April 1918 and was trained as a military engineer. He was posted in the 2nd Engineer Regiment and also served as a carpenter and a telephone operator. However, he never saw action as a soldier and this regret stayed with him for long.
He was de-mobilized from the army in November 1919 following which he applied for the Montpellier prefecture. He also resumed his studies and obtained a law degree in 1921.
He possessed excellent administrative skills and quickly progressed through the ranks as a civil servant in the prefecture, the prefectural administration as chef de cabinet to the deputy of Savoie in 1922 and becoming the sous-préfet of Albertville in 1925. He was France's youngest sous-préfet at the time.
He became friends with Pierre Cot, a radical socialist politician who named him the chef adjoint to his Cabinet of Foreign Affairs under Paul Doumer's presidency in 1932. The next year he was assigned the additional responsibility of serving as the sous-préfet of Thonon-les-Bains.
In 1937, he became the youngest prefect in France when appointed as the préfet in the Aveyron département, based in the commune of Rodez.
The World War II was in full-swing in 1940 when German forces occupied his region and started committing atrocities against the French. The Germans then tried to "prove" that it was Senegalese soldiers who committed these crimes and attempted to make Jean Moulin sign a document falsely blaming Senegalese French Army troops for civilian massacres.