I just stumbled
across a news item. The hotel Lutetia in
Paris is going to close for three years for renovation.
That meant
something to me because for a while I lived there.
For over a
century it was just another good Paris hotel; they now want to make a stab at turning it into a
fabulous hotel de luxe, as good as any of the other great European
establishments.
(“Lutetia,” by
the way, was what the Romans called Paris.)
I stayed in that
hotel while working in Paris in the sixties.
And I became fascinated by its history, especially the part they didn’t
like to talk about.
Back in
1940 the Germans knew a good place when they saw one so as soon as they
occupied Paris they took the hotel over.
It actually became the headquarters of Abwehr, the Nazi intelligence operation.
This was the
outfit that dealt – rather harshly as you can imagine – with sabotage,
counter-espionage, security, etc.
One aspect of
this that you don’t read much about is the effect this had on the citizens of
Paris. The city was flooded with gray
mice.
You see, along
with the German army came busloads of young German women to work for the
occupying force. They wore special
uniforms, sort of gray in color, and there were so many of them about in town
that the Parisians called them “souris grises” – gray mice.
It was a different kind of tourism. For these girls,
the several years beginning with 1940 were a kind of paradise. They got to go to Paris, not only with all
expenses paid, but also with a salary.
For quite a while it was a huge party. For many of them, their home was the Lutetia.
They did the
usual tourism things; sight-seeing, shopping, etc.
They went out of their way to avoid being feisty or argumentative; they carefully
paid the asking price for everything they bought.
Hitler wanted to
“woo” Paris; he had dreams of a post-war empire with Berlin, Paris and London
as key parts of a new Europe – with Berlin on top, as you might guess – so his
orders were to make nice to the local population.
Years later I
was at a tourism conference in New York and met a German woman and we began talking about Paris. She was pleased to learn that I had stayed at
the Lutetia. “I stayed there too, for
several years!” she exclaimed. “During
the forties.”
I suddenly
realized that I was talking to a gray mouse.
I didn't want to be meddlesome so I diplomatically didn’t ask her what it was like to work for the Nazi
security organization Abwehr.
29 comments:
This is a fascinating bit of history .....
Mon dieu! At first I was envisioning an invasion of plague ridden rodents...hmmm ...actually they were that weren't they...!!
Wow! That piece of information must have made the conversation interesting.
all very interesting; photos and story; have a nice Sunday
much love...
Thanks for this vignette.
It seems kind of too bad that a good hotel can't just be kept as a good hotel. Some of the old ones have a character that new ones never achieve. But nothing is permanent in this world. "We'll always have Paris," but only in memory.
Thanks, all, for the generous comments - Berowne.
This was incredibly interesting, and your photos are perfect, and detail something completely new to me. How interesting that you met (and shared conversations with) a true gray mouse! It looks like a lovely hotel, as it is!
I imagine it would take a very brave young German girl to question the Nazi Apparatus in the 1940s , like us in modern day Anglo Saxon Empire , most people are content just to go with the flow as long as they are reasonably material comfortable .. Debate devolves into simply choosing an emotionally charged meme out of the two or three that are available , and nobody talks about the drone strikes, currency wars , mass surveillance and propaganda , rendition gulags etc, etc .. Have you read Len Deightons "Bomber" , ? He really fleshes out the character and motivations of the average German citizen in a small town in Nazi Germany ( just before it gets blown to smithereens by the r.a.f by mistake ) ...i hope you were kind to your brain dead grey mouse Abwehr office fauna ...
Cheers Mate
Great way of expressing it.. during the 40s.. yes indeed... but also very interesting on another view of the war...
What a wonderful bit of history. I have never been to Paris but I kinda have now. Thank you.
I love your fascinating facts and steps back in time!
Wow you have some wonderful memories there Berowne....what an interesting life you've led and that is one very majestic looking hotel.
Hi Berowne
Thanks for visiting.
Your post is an interesting illumination on a particular piece of European history. I am glad that the old buildings like this hotel are given a face lift which prolongs their life.
I am afraid I don’t really have a comment on the subject matter. In the early fifties recent European and German history weren’t taught at all. My history education ended with Bismarck. It is now completely different, and for the past decades German history has been explored, chewed over, digested and bewailed by every German school child and adult. (well, nearly every one, see the recent elections.)
Only in very recent years have self confidence and
pride in achievements after the war resurfaced.
Thanks so much; I really appreciate your intelligent and thoughtful comment.
Interesting you met one of the Grey Mice.
Talking about Hitler: he wanted to create a united Europe under German and Italian supervision, but fortunately ,he didn't succeed.
Last week we voted for the European government, more or less for a united Europe like the USA. This will never happen we have 47 states all with different cultures and languages and nobody wants to give up one's own native tongue. We have 7 kingdoms, several principalities, a Grand Duchy and many republiques with presidents. Which of them would be the leader of all Europe? Hitler, Musolini and Napoleon couldn't unite Europe, neither can we.We don't want it, ...but we have to work together, help and accept each other.What do you think?
Wil, ABCW Team.
You were very diplomatic when meeting the "souris gris" at that time. What memories you have -love to hear more.
leslie
abcw team
Fascinating story. A terrible time in history, tho. Last night I watched the first installment of the History channel's three night program on the World Wars. The carnage was unbelievable. Few world leaders had foresight after the WWI Peace Treaty was signed yet some were well aware that chaos was in the future as a result of the harsh terms of the treaty. An excellent program about the perfidy of the human race and some of its diabolical leaders.
Interesting, even though it made me uncomfortable...
Thank you for sharing this fascinating bit of history. I wasn't aware of the grey mice. Blessings!
Thanks for sharing this interesting history lesson! I bet it was amazing to stay in that hotel!
Mind blowing history...!
Great personal story Berowne. I was more interested in the fact that an already successful hotel was about to get a 'makeover'. When my wife was a young Finnish immigrant, back in the fifties, she had a happy time working in London in the Savoy Hotel. She has been horrified by the trashy alterations to this historical establishment that have been done by its new (foreign) owner. Let's hope the Paris hotel has a better fate.
A fascinating piece of history but I'm sure for those women it wasn't all shopping; to put it bluntly there was probably expectations on them that they put out for their plum location. You have really travelled and lived history Browne.
A beautiful building and a very interesting history.
Thanks for that fascinating bit of dirty history! The building looks fabulous--I hope they only renovate the inside.
I should have been with you. I am always game enough to ask!
Always enjoy your posts Mr. B...
Berowne, as always, your life is amazing. Picking up on that "bread crumb" on info from the "grey mouse" was quick thinking. I probably would have gotten to, "Oh, did you work for..." before I shut my trap!! Amy
Fascinating.. glad I stopped by the Magpie Tales site to see your quiz and continued to read. I'll be in Paris in a month. I love learning the history of a place I plan to visit... even if I have been there before.. never stop learning.. cheers.
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