Native name | Rafle de Marseille |
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English name | Marseille roundup |
Date | January 22–24, 1943 |
Location | Marseille |
Also known as | Rafle du Vieux-Port |
Organised by | Nazi Germany Vichy France |
Participants | 30,000 German Gestapo and French Police[1] |
Outcome | 1,642 deported[2] |
Displaced | 20,000[2] |
Arrests | 6,000[1] |
Part of a series on |
The Holocaust |
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The Marseille roundup was the systematic deportation of the Jews of Marseille in the Old Port between 22 and 24 January 1943 under the Vichy regime during the German occupation of France. Assisted by the French police, directed by René Bousquet, the Germans organized a raid to arrest Jews. The police checked the identity documents of 40,000 people, and the operation sent 2,000 Jews first to Fréjus, then to the camp of Royallieu near Compiègne, in the Northern Zone of France, and then to Drancy internment camp, last stop before the extermination camps. The operation also encompassed the expulsion of an entire neighborhood (30,000 persons) before its destruction. Located in the Old Port, the 1st arrondissement was considered by the Germans to be a "terrorist nest" because of its small, windy and curvy streets[3] For this occasion, SS leader Carl Oberg, in charge of the German Police in France, made the trip from Paris, and transmitted to Bousquet orders directly received from Himmler. It is a notable case of the French police's collaboration with the German occupiers.