By Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author’s program note. In dealing with the events following the fall
of France June 22, 1940 you must always ask yourself, “What would I have
done to keep living?” Then remember that every single Frenchman and
Frenchwoman had to ask this question…. and answer it, often paying with
their lives if they made the wrong decision at the wrong time.
This is the story of two women, one internationally renowned, the
most famous name in fashion, Gabrielle Bonheur “Coco” Chanel….. and
Nancy Wake. One you have heard of for years, may even have one of her
creations near at hand… the other you may be hearing about for the very
first time, for all that she was one of the great heroes of the French
Resistance.
This is their story… and I suggest that before you dig in you search
any search engine for Edith Piaf’s signature tune, “Non, Je ne regrette
rien,” released in 1960. Then return to meet today’s protagonists, both
of whom made decisions which could easily have cost their very lives and
undoubtedly cost one her reputation.
Two events have inspired this article at this time.
First, an important new book on Chanel has just been released,
“Sleeping with the Enemy: Coco Chanel’s Secret War”, author Hal Vaughan.
Second, Nancy Wake died, at 98, August 7, 2011.
Chanel.
Born August 19, 1883 Chanel came into the world with nothing. Her
childhood was chaotic; in 1895 her mother died of tuberculosis and her
father left the family. Chanel spent 6 years in an orphanage. There she
learned the trade of seamstress. She wanted to be a singer… but she
didn’t have the talent. What she had was not mere talent, but genius.
She had the skill, greater than any other couturier, to make a woman
look chic, elegant, well (never over) dressed.
Chanel became a licensed modiste (hat maker) in 1910 and opened her
first Paris boutique. The business took off when theatre actress
Gabrielle Dorziat modelled her hats in the play “Bel Ami” by F. Noziere.
It was not only the clothes Chanel created which were impressive. All
her life she managed to impress the right people; people who saw that
she was going places. In 1920, for instance, she was introduced to
ballet impresario Sergei Diaghilev; she liked him and his family so
much, she invited them to live with her. They were Russian emigres,
broke, yet each of these titans recognized genius in the other. It is a
very useful skill to possess, and Chanel had it in spades.
In 1924, Chanel made an agreement with the Wertheimer brothers,
Pierre and Paul, directors of the eminent perfume house Bourgeois since
1917, creating a corporate entity “Parfums Chanel.” Chanel got 10
percent of the stock. Here was the root of her later problems. Almost
immediately she regretted the deal she’d made and spent the next 20
years (including the years she spent in Nazi occupied France) to gain
full control, denouncing Pierre Wertheimer as the “bandit who screwed
me.”
Loyal, but to whom?
For years there have been doubts about just whom Chanel was loyal to
during the occupation and Vichy regime. Now 84-year-old World War II
veteran Hal Vaughan presents detailed documentation that is sure to make
customers and fans squirm.
His first find was an accident; while working on another project in
the French national police archives. It was a “smoking gun” making it
crystal clear that Chanel was a Nazi agent. (Her code name was
Westminster, which seems like an inside joke given the fact that the
Duke of Westminster, the wealthiest peer of the British realm, refused
to marry her. A gentleman, Westminster allowed her to claim it was he
who had been rejected. She did so in this memorable line, “There have
been several duchesses of Westminster. There is only one Chanel.”
Chanel’s objective, like that of so many other French citizens, was
to get through the war as comfortably and profitably as possible. This
wasn’t necessarily bad; it all depended on the choices you made. And
here is where Chanel went seriously wrong. First, she grew careless
about her anti-Semite opinions. They were bigoted, lurid, and,
importantly, unwise. Chanel had never been stifled; she was not going to
be stifled now,, although every word she uttered on the subject was
ill-advised.
She erred again by commencing an affaire with Baron Hans Gunther von
Dincklage, a professional Abwehr spy 12 years her junior. They lived in
the famous Rtz Hotel, which was under Nazi control.
Vaughan’s book now takes the matter further. His book alleges that in
1940, Chanel was recruited into the Abwehr; a year later she traveled
to Spain on a spy mission and later still went to Berlin on the orders
of a top SS general. And now the facts so painful to read. Vaughan
reports that Chanel’s anti-Semitism pushed her to try to capitalize on
laws allowed for the expropriation of Jewish property to wrest control
of the Chanel perfume lines from the Wertheimer brothers, who were
Jewish. One is relieved to learn that Chanel and the Wertheimers
continued to negotiate after the liberation. In May, 1947 the parties
came to a mutual accommodation. Chanel in future would receive two
percent of all Chanel No.5 sales worldwide, an agreement which
guaranteed her about twenty five million dollars a year, some of which
she could use to rehabilitate a reputation which embarrassed Chanel and
her enterprises.
Nancy Wake.
While Chanel was attempting to rewrite history and buff her image,
Nancy Wake was accepting one high-level decoration after another for the
brave, dangerous, and constantly successful deeds she’d done and which
turned her into one of the signature heroes of the Resistance.
A statement released by Australian prime minister Julia Gillard upon
Wake’s death, said, “Nancy Wake was a woman of exceptional courage and
resourcefulness whose daring exploits saved the lives of hundreds of
Allied personnel and helped bring the Nazi occupation of France to an
end.”
How did this happen?
Born in New Zealand she grew up in Australia after the family moved.
She became a nurse, but her heart wasn’t in it. And when she got an
inheritance from a New Zealand aunt she went out to see the world; in
due course she became Paris correspondent for the Chicago Tribune. The
outbreak of war in 1939 saw her in Marseille. It was there her notable
career began, as she helped British servicemen and Jews escape the
German occupying forces. She was never caught, but her husband, captured
and tortured by the Gestapo, was not so lucky. She avenged him by
participating in the heroic 1944 attack on the local Gestapo
headquarters.
The Gestapo also bestowed her famous name, “The White Mouse,” because
every time she was cornered, like a tiny mouse she managed to escape…
to another daring deed and the highest decorations of France, the United
States, Great Britain, and Australia. In due course, Wake helped to arm
and lead 7,000 resistance fighters, perhaps her finest moment being the
weakening of German defences before the D-Day invasion.
Two women, two choices.
It is easy to judge these women now, to laud Wake and condemn Coco
Chanel. But that begs the essential question. If you had been in
occupied France what would you have done? It’s not easy to say when the
query is real, not academic… which is why in the teaching of history, it
is essential to be scrupulously fair to the deceased… and never allow
snap judgements and easy moralizing for matters as serious and perilous
as this.
No comments:
Post a Comment