Zürcher Nachrichten - Erased identity: Post-war adoptee seeks German roots

EUR -
AED 4.327193
AFN 74.230805
ALL 96.09441
AMD 441.366757
ANG 2.108786
AOA 1080.473238
ARS 1621.059967
AUD 1.667556
AWG 2.120886
AZN 2.010553
BAM 1.948589
BBD 2.361262
BDT 143.269841
BGN 1.941372
BHD 0.444298
BIF 3476.749318
BMD 1.17827
BND 1.487801
BOB 8.101023
BRL 6.10792
BSD 1.172362
BTN 106.618467
BWP 15.523556
BYN 3.361874
BYR 23094.090148
BZD 2.357875
CAD 1.613322
CDF 2686.455014
CHF 0.91488
CLF 0.025934
CLP 1024.18785
CNY 8.140372
CNH 8.116141
COP 4356.652976
CRC 559.529505
CUC 1.17827
CUP 31.224152
CVE 109.858477
CZK 24.229892
DJF 208.777436
DKK 7.471768
DOP 72.063335
DZD 153.189202
EGP 56.291016
ERN 17.674049
ETB 182.447169
FJD 2.61841
FKP 0.873849
GBP 0.873705
GEL 3.151812
GGP 0.873849
GHS 12.884323
GIP 0.873849
GMD 86.599251
GNF 10285.937702
GTQ 8.995712
GYD 245.2425
HKD 9.213122
HNL 31.016227
HRK 7.534564
HTG 153.671351
HUF 379.661356
IDR 19813.315423
ILS 3.676897
IMP 0.873849
INR 107.127181
IQD 1535.890489
IRR 1512677.04426
ISK 144.903285
JEP 0.873849
JMD 182.674029
JOD 0.835329
JPY 182.614173
KES 151.937828
KGS 103.039649
KHR 4714.574098
KMF 492.516478
KPW 1060.446265
KRW 1700.561999
KWD 0.361435
KYD 0.976968
KZT 585.154749
LAK 25121.613045
LBP 104987.64704
LKR 362.731583
LRD 216.309564
LSL 18.887189
LTL 3.479125
LVL 0.712724
LYD 7.416556
MAD 10.75012
MDL 20.135575
MGA 5017.433385
MKD 61.630349
MMK 2474.112913
MNT 4204.773752
MOP 9.437517
MRU 46.942294
MUR 54.448198
MVR 18.216007
MWK 2032.977129
MXN 20.27095
MYR 4.584651
MZN 75.297331
NAD 18.887189
NGN 1580.437042
NIO 43.140545
NOK 11.262018
NPR 170.589746
NZD 1.976123
OMR 0.453046
PAB 1.172362
PEN 3.938144
PGK 5.113101
PHP 67.887182
PKR 327.652747
PLN 4.216339
PYG 7579.950991
QAR 4.273287
RON 5.096139
RSD 117.424031
RUB 90.729883
RWF 1712.263903
SAR 4.420475
SBD 9.479396
SCR 16.354112
SDG 708.73329
SEK 10.698467
SGD 1.492568
SHP 0.884008
SLE 28.864125
SLL 24707.730018
SOS 668.825066
SRD 44.344772
STD 24387.808126
STN 24.409777
SVC 10.257867
SYP 130.248104
SZL 18.881132
THB 36.575843
TJS 11.108394
TMT 4.123945
TND 3.403904
TOP 2.836992
TRY 51.650403
TTD 7.935501
TWD 37.079566
TZS 3035.295187
UAH 50.745022
UGX 4220.382808
USD 1.17827
UYU 45.491662
UZS 14318.077845
VES 473.465822
VND 30776.409932
VUV 139.554544
WST 3.198322
XAF 653.538632
XAG 0.013564
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.184334
XCG 2.112945
XDR 0.812792
XOF 653.538632
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.958618
ZAR 18.87541
ZMK 10605.860014
ZMW 22.198855
ZWL 379.402429
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.8

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    25.8

    +0.89%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.96

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    18.2

    +2.2%

  • AZN

    -2.2500

    204.2

    -1.1%

  • BCC

    -2.2500

    82.13

    -2.74%

  • GSK

    -0.8444

    59.52

    -1.42%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    97.09

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    90.28

    +0.01%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    31.46

    +1.49%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.13

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.65

    +0.77%

  • BP

    -0.3308

    38.18

    -0.87%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.08

    +1.76%

Erased identity: Post-war adoptee seeks German roots
Erased identity: Post-war adoptee seeks German roots / Photo: Xavier GALIANA - AFP

Erased identity: Post-war adoptee seeks German roots

Claudine Spire pointed to a group of toddlers in a black-and-white photo. "I thought I recognised myself," she said, indicating a girl with curly hair and a short coat. But it was not her.

Text size:

As part of the 78-year-old Frenchwoman's relentless search for her roots, Spire found the photo a few days ago in the archives of the French ministry of foreign affairs.

"I felt as a child that I didn't quite belong," she said. "I didn't look like anyone in the family."

Spire is among the post-war children from the French-occupied part of Germany who had German mothers and French soldiers as fathers.

About 1,500 of them were brought to France, presumably illegally, by French authorities between 1946 and 1951 and handed over to adoptive families.

"The French authorities actively sought these children and pressured the mothers to give them up," said Yves Denechere, a historian at the University of Angers. "This was about replenishing the population after the war."

German women expecting a child from a Frenchman were required to report this to the occupying authorities. While still in the maternity ward, many were visited by "research officers" who urged them to part with the child, claiming that their son or daughter would have a better future in France.

The officers brought a form, ready for the mothers to sign: "For personal reasons, I hand over my child to the French authorities," it said. The mothers waived all rights to the child, and stated that they did so willingly.

Claudine Spire's mother, who became pregnant at 19, was pressured by her parents to give up the "child of the enemy".

Claudine was placed in a French children's home in Nordrach in the Black Forest when she was barely one and a half.

The French occupying authorities had set up the home in a former "Lebensborn" institution that had been run by the Nazis to promote the Aryan race.

In selecting children for adoption, the French postwar authorities used racial selection criteria that were eerily similar to those applied by the Third Reich.

"The children sent to France were mainly white, with blond hair, and in good health," said Denechere.

- 'Absolutely disgusting' -

Since about half of the French soldiers stationed in Germany were from North or sub-Saharan Africa, many children did not match the criteria and were either returned to their mothers or placed in German children's homes.

"I was on the list of children who were not to be proposed for adoption," said Spire, whose father came from Morocco.

But adoptive parents were found for her regardless, and she grew up in a loving family.

Only in her early 50s did she feel compelled to search for her roots.

"I knew that I was adopted, but I didn't know the circumstances," she said.

The more she learnt about the past, the more she was shocked.

"It's absolutely disgusting what the French state did back then," Spire said, also condemning postwar Germany for allowing the adoptions to happen.

Spire eventually found her German mother. Their first meeting took place in the entrance hall of a hospital in Offenburg in southwest Germany, just across the border from Strasbourg.

"It was very strange. She hadn't told her husband and daughter anything about me," Spire remembered.

Her mother addressed her as Margarete, her birth name that was changed upon adoption.

"Our origins were erased," Spire states.

These adoptions took place in a legal vacuum, as Germany, having no government, was divided into zones occupied by various Allied countries.

"Those were irregular, illegitimate practices," said Denechere.

Yet been no legal challenges have been brought, the historian added.

"Against whom? And for what exactly?", he said.

In addition such cases would presumably be covered by statutes of limitations by now.

"This part of history is completely unknown to the public," he said.

This is gradually changing thanks in part to a 2022 documentary on the topic and a recent novel by author Anke Feuchter telling the story of a woman in a similar situation as Spire's mother.

With criticism of the practice mounting, many adopted children of the occupation are still looking for their German roots.

Their search, it turns out, has been facilitated by the French authorities' decision to repatriate all documents related to the adoptions in a bid to remove traces of the practices.

Today, those very documents have allowed historians and interested parties to shed light on a dark chapter of German-French post-war history.

This is how Claudine Spire found photos of children in Nordrach who, like her, were adopted.

But she has yet to find any pictures of herself from back then.

A.Wyss--NZN