-
Svitolina topples Swiatek at Indian Wells as Sabalenka, Rybakina advance
-
French soldier killed in attack in Iraqi Kurdistan
-
Canadian, German and Norway leaders hold Arctic security talks
-
Spurs search for salvation, Arsenal ready for title charge
-
'Ticket to Tehran': Iranian Jews in Israel still long for Iran
-
With new ships, Canada aims to be 'icebreaking superpower'
-
Brazil's Recife basks in success of 'The Secret Agent' before Oscars
-
Casting directors finally get their due at Oscars
-
Fantastic Mr Stowaway: fox sails from Britain to New York port
-
Five share lead at US PGA Players Championship
-
Trump says Iran shouldn't come to World Cup for 'own life and safety'
-
US jury to begin deliberations in social media addiction trial
-
Venezuela leader's first foreign trip abruptly canceled
-
Forest stunned by Midtjylland, Villa beat Lille in Europa League
-
Sinner rolls into Indian Wells semi-final clash with Zverev
-
Iran says will make US regret war as oil prices soar
-
Trump says Iran war moving 'very rapidly'
-
NASA says 'on track' for Artemis 2 launch as soon as April 1
-
Valentino mixes 80s and Baroque splendour on Rome return
-
Italian prosecutors seek trial for Amazon over tax evasion
-
Polish president vetoes 40-bn-euro EU defence funding plan
-
Duplantis clears 6.31m to set 15th pole vault world record
-
Dating app Tinder dabbles with AI matchmaking
-
Sabalenka out-guns Mboko to reach Indian Wells semi-finals
-
Watkins ends drought as Villa snatch Europa last 16 advantage over Lille
-
'Say a prayer and send it': Paralympic alpine skiers tackle fear
-
Israel renews Beirut strikes after threatening to expand Lebanon operations
-
Assailant dead after ramming vehicle into Michigan synagogue
-
The Chinese cable that could trip up Chile's new leader
-
Assailant dead after ramming car into Michigan synagogue
-
World in 'new dark age' of abuse: UN rights expert
-
Morikawa pulls out of Players Championship with back trouble
-
Scavenging ravens memorize vast tracts of wolf hunting grounds: study
-
In Iran, shut shops, joblessness and a dash for cash
-
Polish bishops announce 'independent' probe of child sexual abuse
-
Top US, China economy officials to meet for talks in Paris
-
Israel strikes Beirut after threatening to expand Lebanon operations
-
Out with a bang: Morrissey cancels Spain concert over noise
-
Vingegaard soloes to victory in Paris-Nice fifth stage
-
Poland reels from row over EU loans to fend off Russia
-
Spurs extend season ticket deadline as relegation fears grow
-
Laundry fire on giant US aircraft carrier injures two: US military
-
Mauritanian anti-slavery stalwart Boubacar Ould Messaoud dead
-
Behind Cambodian border casino, Thai military shows off a scam hub
-
Chile's Smiljan Radic Clarke wins Pritzker architecture prize
-
Scotland boss Townsend says Six Nations title 'out of our hands'
-
Sheehan and van der Flier recalled for Triple Crown decider with Scots
-
Chelsea's Neto faces UEFA punishment for pushing ball boy
-
Engraved tombs help keep memories alive in Pakistan
-
IPL-linked Sunrisers sign Pakistan's Ahmed for Hundred
Out of the shadows: women in the French Resistance
For decades after the end of World War II, the thousands of women who took part in France's resistance against Nazi German occupation in WWII rarely got a mention in the history books.
The stories of Lucie Aubrac, a teacher who broke her husband Raymond out of a lorry transporting him to a Gestapo jail, Marie-Madeleine Fourcade, a Resistance leader who was smuggled to Spain in a mailbag, and Madeleine Riffaud, a sharpshooter who helped liberate Paris, were exceptional tales in an otherwise male-dominated narrative.
Abroad, perhaps the most famous "resistante" is US-born dancer and singer Josephine Baker, who served as a lieutenant in the French air force's auxiliary corps during the war and passed on information concealed in sheet music.
The feminist movement of the late 1960s and 1970s led to a surge of interest in the role played by women in the war.
But it took until 2015 for women resisters in the person of ethnologist Germaine Tillion and Genevieve De Gaulle-Anthonioz, a niece of war hero General Charles de Gaulle, to be honoured with places in the Pantheon mausoleum, France's secular holy of holies.
- Civilian resistance -
Women accounted for between 12 and 25 percent of all Resistance members, according to Laurent Douzou, a history professor at Lumiere Lyon-11 university.
And yet only six women have been honoured as Companions of the Liberation -- an award created by De Gaulle to decorate those who fought for France's freedom -- compared with 1,038 men.
"Civilian resistance, which was mainly the work of women, was not counted," Vladimir Trouplin, curator of a Paris museum dedicated to Resistance heroes, explained to AFP.
Misogyny also explains why women received so little recognition for the role they played.
"In those days women were not supposed to steal the limelight", Trouplin noted.
Nearly 80 years after the end of the war, the race is on to collect the stories of the women who made a strike for freedom in countless vital ways -- by for instance ferrying messages and packages, transporting arms in baskets and buggies or acting as escorts for fugitive French or Allied prisoners or spies.
Ahead of International Women's Day on March 8, AFP interviewed three of the thousands of women whose stories of wartime heroism had yet to be told: Odile de Vasselot, aged 101, Odette Niles, aged 100, and Michele Agniel, aged 96.
All three took advantage of the fact that women were deemed less suspect and less courageous than men to slip unnoticed through checkpoints and borders.
All three diced with death.
Odette spent nearly three years in French internment camps, Odile was nearly killed during the liberation of Paris and Michele was sent to Germany on the last deportation train from Paris in August 1944.
Between 1940 and 1944, 6,700 women were deported from occupied France, the vast majority of them Resistance members.
Their bravery helped advance the struggle for the emancipation of women. In 1944, French women finally gained the right to vote.
H.E.Young--AMWN