The following account is the testimony of Elise Martilleux. Now 88 years old, she shares a story of survival, psychological resilience, and the hidden history of a detention center on the outskirts of Compiègne during the summer of 1943. This is a narrative of how the human spirit preserves its dignity even when subjected to the most dehumanizing conditions of war.
The House of Shadow and Time
I was 20 years old when I learned that the human experience could be reduced to the ticking of a stopwatch. Between April and August 1943, in a repurposed administrative building near Compiègne, time was not measured by hours or days, but by mechanical intervals. For those of us held behind those grey walls, our lives were governed by a strict, nine-minute rotation—a window of time allotted to every soldier who passed through the facility.
Official records are largely silent about this place. They describe it as a “logistical support point” or a “transit center.” But those of us who were there know the truth. We were young women, mostly between the ages of 18 and 25, caught in a system designed to provide “moral support” to troops heading to the Eastern Front. In reality, it was a factory for the systematic destruction of human dignity.
The Arrival at Compiègne
My journey began on April 12, 1943. My mother and I were living in Saintliss, northeast of Paris, surviving the occupation by sewing uniforms. I was taken not because I had committed a crime, but because I was the right age and my name appeared on a bureaucrat’s list.
We were transported in the back of a freight truck. Upon arrival at the three-story grey building, the separation was immediate. I was stripped of my identity—my hair was shaved, my clothes replaced with a coarse grey shirt, and my name replaced by a number.
There were twelve of us on the ground floor. I remember them all:
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Marguerite: Only 19, her spirit fragile as glass.
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Thérèse: A woman of deep faith who prayed in whispers.
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Louise: A farm girl with hands calloused by honest labor.
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Simone: A philosophy student from the Sorbonne with an unbreakable gaze.
The officer in charge explained the “rotations” in a calm, bureaucratic voice. He spoke of the soldiers’ exhaustion and our “role” in their rest. Any resistance, he warned, meant immediate transfer to the concentration camps.

Room 6: The Nine-Minute Rule
The hallway smelled of damp stone and cold sweat. At the very end was Room 6. It was a small space, three meters by four, containing only a narrow iron bed and a wooden chair.
The rule was absolute. Every soldier was granted exactly nine minutes. When the time expired, a guard would knock, the door would open, and the next rotation would begin. On my first day, I was called seven times. That is 63 minutes of total time, but in the psychological reality of that room, those minutes stretched into an eternity.
The intent was clear: to reduce us to objects. To make us believe we were nothing more than cogs in a massive, impersonal machine. The expectation—the sound of footsteps approaching in the corridor—was often worse than the act itself. It was a method of psychological demolition.
The Resistance of the Soul
It was Simone who saved us. One evening, after we had been returned to our communal room, she gathered us in a circle on the stone floor.
“They can lock us up and use us like objects,” she said, her voice steady. “But they cannot take what we choose to keep inside. As long as we remember who we were before this place, they cannot destroy us completely.”
From that night on, we began our “Evening Circles.” It was our most powerful act of resistance. In the darkness, we didn’t talk about the building or Room 6. We spoke of our real lives:
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Marguerite told us about swimming in the rivers of Brittany, the water sparkling like diamonds under the July sun.
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Thérèse recited the poetry of Verlaine and Rimbaud, her voice trembling with the beauty of the words.
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Louise sang lullabies from her village near Rouen, her fragile voice providing a moment of peace.
I told them about my father’s forge in Saintliss. I described the fire, the snoring of the bellows, and the way the incandescent metal would glow. My father used to tell me, “Iron bends under pressure. It deforms, but it does not break. Even when it is twisted, it can be reforged.”
In those circles, we were being reforged. We were rebuilding ourselves story by story, memory by memory. We refused to be reduced to nine-minute intervals.
The Banality of the System
One day, a soldier entered Room 6 and did something unexpected. He didn’t approach the bed. Instead, he sat on the wooden chair and remained silent for the entire nine minutes.
He came back for three days, doing the same thing. On the fourth day, he spoke. He told me he had a sister my age in Munich. He spoke of the horrors he had seen on the Eastern Front and said, in broken French, “I am sorry.”
I never forgave him. An apology cannot erase the complicity of being part of such a system. But looking at him, I realized a terrifying truth that Simone later identified as “the banality of evil.” These weren’t always monsters; they were often ordinary people who had stopped thinking for themselves, who had allowed themselves to be transformed into cogs.
Survival and the Long Shadow
In August 1943, the building was closed as the front lines shifted. I was transferred to Ravensbrück. I survived the hunger, the labor, and the cold, perhaps because I held onto the stories from our circles. When the Allies arrived in April 1945, I was “free,” but freedom is a complicated word.
I returned to Saintliss to find my home empty and my father’s forge gone. I lived in silence for decades. I married a kind man named Henry, and we had two children, Marie and Jacques. I was a good mother, but there was always a distance—an invisible barrier between me and a world that could never understand where I had been.
For 66 years, I kept my story locked away. I feared the judgment and the pity. But in 2009, a historian named Claire Dufren found my name. She told me, “Your story deserves to be known so that it never happens again.”
The Power of the Voice
I finally spoke. I sat before a camera and recounted the corridor, the grey door, the nine minutes, and the faces of the women I loved. I spoke for Marguerite, who lost her voice, and for Simone, who gave us ours.
The documentary, Minutes, Room 6, was released in 2011. When it aired, the silence that had been my prison finally broke. Thousands of people reached out. My own family finally understood the shadow that had hung over my life. I realized then that silence doesn’t protect; it only allows the past to fester.
A Message to the Future
What happened in that building was an attempt to erase our humanity. They tried to turn us into numbers on a ledger. But they failed. They failed because we kept our memories, our names, and our stories.
To those who listen to this today: remember that dignity can survive even the unspeakable. Never allow yourself to become a cog in a system that devalues human life. Hold onto your stories, for they are the one thing that can never be taken from you.
In Room 6, for nine minutes at a time, they tried to destroy us. But in our circles, we remained unbroken.