Tillion was born Émilie Cussac on 20 February 1876 in Talizat commune to a wealthy family of landowners in Cantal.[1] Her father, Francois Cussac, was a notary of Puy-de-Dôme, and her mother was Antoinette Vivier.[2] The Cussac family had produced a line of hereditary mayors of their town prior to the French Revolution.[1]
In 1900, she married Lucien Tillion, a magistrate and a native of Charolais.[1][3] Tillion, together with her husband, was the author of several tourist guidebooks in the Guides Bleus series,[4][5] which is considered the oldest such publications in France.[6] She was also a co-author of the Pays d'Europe volume.[7][8]
Lucien Tillion died in 1925, leaving his wife to raise their two daughters, Germaine and Françoise, alone.[1] In Paris, Émilie would be known as Madame Tillion. She gave lectures on art and was considered part of the milieu culturel, a group composed of intellectuals and ambassadors' wives.[9]
French Resistance
Tillion's daughter Germaine spent six years in Algeria, studying desert tribes.[1] Mother and daughter reunited when the latter returned to France on 9 June 1940, a few days before the German army occupied Paris.[1] Both planned to escape to southern France until they found it pointless after hearing Philippe Pétain’s capitulation to the Nazis.[1][10] By October of the same year, Tillion was an active member of the French Resistance serving as a liaison between the writers and artists who were part of the movement.[10]
Tillion became one of the victims of the French collaborator, Father Robert Alesch. He reported her to the Abwehr for her participation in the attempted escape of Jean and Pierre de Vomécourt. Both were SOE agents incarcerated at the Fresnes Prison. She was deported to Ravensbrück four months after her daughter was arrested.[11]
Tillion and 958 other women were transported in cattle wagons.[1] An account by Geneviève de Gaulle-Anthonioz, a fellow prisoner, described her as around 70 years old during this ordeal but was looking forward to seeing her daughter.[12] Upon meeting her at the camp, Tillion told Germaine, "Voyage exultant. Cologne, Düsseldorf, Elberfeld en ruines. La fin de la guerre est proche." (Great voyage. Cologne, Düsseldorf, Elberfeld in ruins. The end of the war is close.)[11]
At Ravensbrück, prisoners who were 69 years old and above were targets of extermination. Through her contacts at the camp, Germaine managed to have her mother's age recorded as less than 60.[1] Émilie Tillion, however, was killed on 2 March 1945.[13] She was sentenced to death by gas chamber after she was selected from a targeted block because of her white hair.[14] It is said that her mother's murder inspired Germaine to write the three-act operetta, Le Verfügbar aux Enfers.[15]
^Curtis, Lara R. (2019). Writing Resistance and the Question of Gender: Charlotte Delbo, Noor Inayat Khan, and Germaine Tillion. Cham: Springer Nature. p. 12. ISBN978-3-030-31241-1.
^Sacriste, Fabien (2011). Germaine Tillion, Jacques Berque, Jean Servier et Pierre Bourdieu: Des ethnologues dans la guerre d'indépendance algérienne (in French). Paris: Editions L'Harmattan. p. 38. ISBN978-2-296-54392-8.
^Montès, Christian (2014). American Capitals: A Historical Geography. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. p. 39. ISBN978-0-226-08048-2.
^Office, Library of Congress Copyright (1937). Catalog of Copyright Entries. New Series: 1938-1939, Volume 35. Washington: Copyright Office, Library of Congress. p. 1136.
^Helm, Sarah (31 March 2015). Ravensbruck: Life and Death in Hitler's Concentration Camp for Women. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN978-0-385-53911-1.
^ abReid, D. (2003). Germaine Tillion and Resistance to the Vichy Syndrome. History and Memory,15(2), 36–63.
^Booth, William James (2006). Communities of Memory: On Witness, Identity, and Justice. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 94. ISBN978-0-8014-4436-4.