Berty Albrecht


Berty Albrecht.

Life

Berthe Wild was born in Marseilles on 15 February 1893 to a middle-class Protestant family. She married the Dutch banker Frédéric Albrecht in 1918. They had two children, Frédéric and Mireille. Separated from her husband, she moved to Paris, where she made friends with Victor Basch, a teacher at the Sorbonne and the president of the Human Rights League. She founded a feminist journal, Le Problème Sexuel, in which she campaigned for the right to access contraception and abortion.
Conscious of the reality of Nazism and hostile to the Munich Accords, she founded a welcome centre for German refugees. There she met Captain Henri Frenay and participated in all of his Resistance initiatives, despite their political differences. She was close to the Communists, whereas Frenay, although a visceral enemy of the Nazis and collaborators, made an exception for Marshal Pétain, whom he thought was secretly preparing to liberate France. Together, they successively produced three journals: “Bulletins d’informations et de propagande”, “Les Petites Ailes” and then “Vérités”, before becoming directors of the “Combat” network.

Death

Detained and released once by the French police, she was arrested on 28 May 1943 by the Gestapo and transferred to Fresnes Prison, where she was tortured. She died by hanging herself there on 31 May 1943.

Legacy

After the war, her body was buried in the crypt of the French Resistance martyrs in Fort Mont-Valérien. This is now part of the Mémorial de la France combattante. Albecht is one of the six women nominated to the order of French Resistance Fighter.

Honour