AC. Why the Nazis SHOT some French female prisoners… (the reason will chill you to the bone)

In the spring of 1998, in the quiet, climate-controlled basement of the National Archives in Strasbourg, France, historian Jean-Marc de Laland opened a box that had remained sealed for over half a century. As an expert in the history of the Nazi occupation of the Alsace region, he expected to find the mundane debris of bureaucracy: rationing cards, logistical reports, or perhaps lists of deportees.

Instead, he pulled out a series of official German photographs dated March 1943. They were accompanied by handwritten reports in Gothic script, stamped with the dreaded SS insignia and classified as Streng Geheim—strictly secret.

The images were haunting. Women in tattered, filthy uniforms were lined up against a cold stone wall. Their faces were turned toward the lens with the hollow, vacant stare of those who have seen the end. Every woman in the photographs shared a common trait: they were of African descent.

Jean-Marc felt a physical chill as he read the heading of the accompanying report: Sonderbehandlung (Special Treatment). In the lexicon of the Third Reich, this was a sterile euphemism for summary execution.

These women were French citizens. They were members of the Resistance, captured on French soil. Under the Geneva Conventions, they were supposed to be protected as prisoners of war. Yet, the reason for their execution was scrawled in a single, chilling line at the bottom of the document:

“Neger personal, ungeeignet für Haftanstalt” (Negro personnel, unsuitable for detention).

They had not been killed for espionage, sabotage, or violence. They were executed simply because their existence violated the racial “standards” of the Nazi regime. In the eyes of the command at the Schirmeck-Vorbruck camp, they were deemed “inferior” and too “unfit” to be housed alongside white prisoners.

For 55 years, this truth had been buried. No history books mentioned them; no memorials bore their names. It was as if they had been erased from the fabric of time. But they had existed. And among them was a young woman named Aïcha de Lorme, who left behind a voice from the shadows.

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The Two Worlds of Aïcha de Lorme

The story of Aïcha de Lorme begins in the vibrant, working-class neighborhoods of Lyon. Born in Dakar and raised in France, Aïcha was 24 years old in 1942, working as a nursing assistant at the Édouard Herriot Hospital.

She was the daughter of Mamadou de Lorme, a Senegalese veteran of the First World War who had bled for France in the trenches of Verdun, and Céleste Moreau, a Frenchwoman from Lyon. Aïcha grew up between two worlds, fueled by her father’s stories of the Tirailleurs Sénégalais—the African riflemen who fought for a motherland that rarely recognized their heroism.

By June 1940, the world Aïcha knew began to fracture. After the fall of France and the signing of the armistice, Lyon fell into the “Free Zone” controlled by the collaborationist Vichy government. But the air was thick with a new kind of hostility. Vichy propaganda posters glorified a version of France that only featured blonde families and blue-eyed children. People like Aïcha were being edited out of the national identity.

Her father was dismissed from his job at a metallurgical plant without explanation. Her colleagues at the hospital grew distant and cold. When German troops finally occupied the Free Zone in November 1942, the situation turned from exclusionary to deadly.

The Freedom Network

In December 1942, Aïcha met Dr. Henri Bouchard. He appeared at the hospital in the middle of the night, carrying a bleeding, unconscious young man.

“Do you know how to do sutures?” he whispered.

Aïcha didn’t ask questions. She cleaned the wounds and stitched the torn skin of the young partisan while Bouchard watched the corridor for patrols. That night, she learned that the boy was a saboteur who had attacked a German convoy.

“He will need antibiotics,” Aïcha told the doctor. “I know where to get them.”

With those words, she joined the French Resistance. Operating under the code name “Freedom Network,” Aïcha used her position at the hospital to steal medical supplies, hide wounded fighters, and transport coded messages tucked inside bandages. She never picked up a rifle, but her hands saved dozens of lives that the Gestapo wanted ended.

In February 1943, the network was betrayed by an informant. During a chaotic raid intended to rescue political prisoners from a transport train, 23 members of the Resistance were captured. Aïcha was among them, her medical bag still filled with stolen morphine and sulfa drugs.

She was taken to the Compiègne transit camp north of Paris. For three days, she was interrogated. She remained silent. Frustrated, an SS officer spat at her, “You are not even a true Frenchwoman,” before ordering her transfer to a specialized camp in the mountains of Alsace: Schirmeck-Vorbruck.

Schirmeck-Vorbruck: The Camp of Silence

Schirmeck was not an extermination camp like Auschwitz, but it was a place of “security detention” where the regime sent those it deemed a threat to German order. Under the command of SS officer Karl Buck, a racial fanatic, the camp became a laboratory for “cleansing” Alsace of “undesirables.”

When Aïcha arrived on February 25, 1943, she was stripped of her identity and became Number 4739. She was assigned to Barrack 7, a drafty wooden structure where fifty women shared a single bucket for a latrine.

Aïcha quickly noticed a horrifying pattern. While the white prisoners were subjected to the standard brutality of the SS, the Black women were singled out for personal, vitriolic abuse. They were mocked with animalistic slurs and forced to perform the most grueling physical labor, such as hauling massive stones to build roads in the freezing mountain air.

In Barrack 9, separated by a barbed-wire fence, were 19 other Black French women. Among them were:

  • Aminata Traoré: A 32-year-old military nurse from Mali who had served the French Army.

  • Simone Léon: A 20-year-old teacher from Martinique arrested for distributing anti-Nazi leaflets.

  • Thérèse Camara: A 41-year-old messenger from Guinea.

Aminata was the first to notice the disappearances. She kept a mental tally: 37 Black women had arrived since January. By early March, only 23 remained. The guards claimed they had been “transferred,” but no trucks were seen leaving, and no news ever returned.

On the night of March 10, Aminata watched through a crack in the barrack wall as four women were led away toward the back gate of the camp in the dead of night. When she asked a guard about them the next day, he simply pointed to the stone wall at the rear of the clearing and laughed.

The Diary Under the Floorboards

Aïcha realized that she was living on borrowed time. She decided that if she was to die, she would not die in silence.

She had no paper or pen. She used a sharp splinter of wood as a stylus and scraps of fabric torn from the lining of her straw mattress as parchment. For ink, she used charcoal scraped from the kitchen chimney. She hid these scraps under a loose floorboard in Barrack 7.

“March 12: Four women taken away last night. Aminata says they are dead. I believe her. I am afraid I am next.”

On March 14, 1943, at 4:30 a.m., the heavy thud of boots stopped at Barrack 7. The door was kicked open. An SS officer swept his lantern across the bunks until the light landed on Aïcha.

She was dragged into the freezing courtyard, where three other women were already waiting: Simone, Thérèse, and a 19-year-old girl named Mariama Diop. They were thrown into a truck and driven three kilometers into an isolated forest clearing.

In the center of the clearing stood a stone wall. As the dawn light began to break, Aïcha saw that the wall was covered in dark, reddish-brown stains.

The officer lined them up. Simone began to sob, pleading that she had done nothing but distribute flyers. The officer approached them, looking at their faces with a mixture of clinical curiosity and profound disgust.

“You are ugly,” he said in broken French. “You do not deserve to live among the others.”

He stepped back and gave the order. The rifles cracked.

Thérèse fell first. Mariama was killed instantly. Simone tried to run but was struck in the back, her body convulsing in the mud before going still. Aïcha fell to her knees, not from a bullet, but because her legs had failed her. She closed her eyes, waiting for the final impact.

Instead, she heard a shout. A younger German officer came running into the clearing, waving a set of papers. He argued heatedly with the commanding officer about “incomplete documentation” and “unauthorized procedures.”

The execution was halted. Aïcha was dragged back to the truck, her eyes fixed on the bodies of her friends left lying in the dirt. She was thrown back into Barrack 7, where she collapsed into a state of catatonic shock.

A Promise to the Dead

It was Aminata who pulled her back. She sat with Aïcha in the darkness, holding her hand.

“You are still here,” Aminata whispered. “Maybe you were spared so you could tell the world what happened to them.”

Those words gave Aïcha a reason to breathe. She returned to her hidden diary, writing with a ferocity born of desperation.

“March 14: They took four of us. Three were killed. I do not know why I am alive. Simone Léon, Thérèse Camara, Mariama Diop. They died because they were Black. For that reason alone. May God welcome them, and may someone tell this story.”

She recorded every name she could find. By the end of March 1943, only eight Black women remained in Schirmeck. Of the 37 who had entered the camp that year, 29 had been murdered.

Aïcha wrote: “We are not monsters. We are mothers, daughters, sisters. We loved, we laughed. We deserve to be remembered not as numbers, but as human beings.”

The Liberation and the Long Silence

Schirmeck-Vorbruck was liberated by Allied forces on November 23, 1944. The soldiers found a nightmare: piles of remains, skeletal survivors, and the blood-stained stone wall.

Aïcha was among those rescued. She was 26 years old, but her hair had turned entirely white. She weighed only 42 kilograms (92 lbs). Her body was a map of scars and infections, but her spirit was anchored by the promise she had made.

She was taken to a hospital in Strasbourg. Aminata had survived as well, and the two women often sat in the hospital garden in a silence that only survivors can share.

When Aïcha was finally discharged, she found she had no home to return to. Her father had died of a neglected illness during the war, and her mother had disappeared in the chaos of the occupation. Dr. Bouchard, her mentor in the Resistance, had been executed by the Gestapo.

She was alone, but she possessed the scraps of fabric that held the truth.

For decades, the story of the Black women of Schirmeck remained an uncomfortable footnote that the French government and the public were not ready to acknowledge. The heroism of the Resistance was often portrayed as a monolithic, homogenous effort. The specific racial targeting of Black French citizens by the Nazi occupiers was a “strictly secret” atrocity that nearly slipped through the cracks of history.

It wasn’t until the 1987 renovations of the site—which now houses the European Centre for Deported Resistance Members—that Aïcha’s diary was found beneath the floorboards. Her words, etched in charcoal on tattered cloth, finally gave names to the shadows against the stone wall.

Today, Aïcha de Lorme and her comrades are recognized not just as victims of a brutal regime, but as patriots who fought for a country that struggled to see them. Their story is a chilling reminder that hatred often seeks out the most vulnerable, but it also proves that even in the deepest darkness, the human will to bear witness can never be fully extinguished.