AC. Only 18 Years Old: What the German Commandant Demanded of Her in Room 13!

The following account is a reconstruction based on historical testimonies from survivors of the 1940s. It preserves the emotional gravity and literary style of the original narratives while ensuring the language adheres to modern safety and publishing standards.

I was eighteen years old when a foreign officer entered my family’s kitchen, pointed a gloved finger at me, and informed my father that I was being requisitioned for administrative services at the prefecture of Lyon. My mother squeezed my hand so hard I felt my bones groan. My father couldn’t look me in the eye. We all knew it was a lie. We knew I wouldn’t return the same. And we all knew there was no choice. It was March 1943; France had been occupied for three years, and the authorities did not ask for permission. They simply took what they wanted.

My name is Bernadette Martin. I am now over eighty years old, and I am going to tell a story that few history books have had the courage to write clearly. When we discuss the Second World War, we speak of grand battles, heroic resistance, and liberation. We rarely speak of what happened on the upper floors of requisitioned hotels, in numbered rooms, where young girls were transformed into silent resources for an occupying force.

I was not sent to a detention camp. I was used in a way that, for decades, made me wish I had not survived. Surviving what happened in Room 13 of the Grand Étoile Hotel was not a liberation; it was a perpetual sentence within my own body. They didn’t call it a violation; they called it a “service.” We weren’t seen as victims; we were “resources.”

Commander Klaus Richter, a man with a wife and three children waiting for him in Bavaria, did not see himself as a villain. He saw himself as someone exercising a right of conquest. He preferred the youngest ones, claiming that “fresh company” calmed the pressures of command. And I, with my long chestnut hair and visible innocence, was chosen to be his exclusively for eight months. Every Tuesday and Friday, punctually at 9:00 p.m., as if my existence were merely a stamped form on his desk.

The Bureaucracy of the Grand Étoile

The hotel was located on Rue de la République in the heart of Lyon, a city once known for its silk and Renaissance beauty. When the occupation moved into the southern zone in November 1942, they transformed the city into a strategic center. While the secret police occupied the Terminus Hotel, the military requisitioned the Grand Étoile—a five-story Art Nouveau building—and turned it into a “rest home.”

That was a sanitized label for a military facility. Official documents discovered decades later confirm the existence of hundreds of these structures throughout occupied Europe. These were not ordinary establishments; they were organized, hierarchical, and medicalized. There were records, set schedules, and daily quotas.

In the military truck that took me there, five other girls sat in leaden silence. It was raining. I remember the water hitting the canvas tarpaulin with a hypnotic rhythm, as if the outside world was still normal. But when the doors opened and I saw the banners hanging at the entrance and the armed guards, I understood I was entering a prison where the bars were invisible.

For the first few days, I tried to grasp the logic of the place. A woman named Madame Colette managed the daily operations. She was not the enemy; she was one of our own—a collaborator. That hurt more than any direct force. She explained the rules with a mechanical voice: strict hygiene, weekly medical checkups, total obedience, no resistance, and no visible marks. The officers wanted “efficiency” and “quick relief.”

I was assigned to Room 13. It was at the end of the third-floor corridor behind a dark wooden door. It featured a double bed with white sheets and wallpaper with delicate flowers. There was even a painting on the wall—a French rural landscape that contrasted sharply with the reality inside. Madame Colette told me I was “lucky” to be chosen by a single officer rather than serving many. She used the word “grateful,” as if there were an acceptable gradation of trauma.

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The Ritual of Room 13

The first time I saw Klaus Richter, he was impeccably dressed. He didn’t shout. He entered the room, carefully closed the door, hung his coat on the rack, and looked at me like someone evaluating a newly acquired item. He said my name correctly—Bernadette—pronouncing each syllable. He said I was pretty and would be of “good service.”

Then he simply acted as if he had an absolute right to me. I stood there motionless, feeling my mind disconnect from my body. It is a feeling only survivors truly understand. You don’t leave your body, but you disconnect parts of it. The real self flees to a mental basement where the immediate reality cannot reach.

This occurred twice a week for eight months. Richter was punctual. He never failed to appear, even during Allied bombings or local unrest. Sometimes he talked about his family or the progress of the front. Other times, he remained silent. Violence does not need to be physical to destroy; systematic, ritualized, and bureaucratic harm is even more devastating because there is no single explosion—only the slow erosion of the soul.

There were perhaps thirty of us in that hotel. We weren’t allowed to speak freely, but our glances in the corridors said everything. There was a girl named Simone who was very young and came from a farm near Grenoble. She cried softly every night through the thin walls. One morning, the crying stopped. Madame Colette said Simone had been “transferred.” We all knew that meant she was no longer useful and had been discarded. We never saw her again.

The Mark of Shame

In August 1944, Lyon was liberated. American troops entered the city, and the bells rang for hours. People celebrated in the streets with flags and music. The nightmare was over for everyone else, but for us, it had merely changed form.

When the authorities regained control, they began identifying “collaborators.” A woman who had been seen with the occupying forces was automatically suspect. The term used was “horizontal collaboration.” It was as if we had made a strategic choice. I saw women dragged to the public square, their heads shaved in front of jeering crowds. Everyone wanted someone to punish, and we were the easiest targets.

I escaped the public shaming by luck. Madame Colette was arrested and, for reasons unknown, refused to give our names. She was sentenced to fifteen years and died in her cell in 1953. Because of her silence, about ten of us were able to disappear into anonymity.

I returned to my village, but nothing was the same. My mother begged me to lie—to say I had simply worked in a factory. I spent the next six decades building a life on that lie. I married a man named Henri in 1950. He was a gentle carpenter who didn’t ask questions. For forty-eight years, he slept next to a woman who wore a permanent mask. Every time he touched me, I was back in Room 13. Every time he took me in his arms, I turned into a statue. He died in 1999 never knowing the woman he shared his life with.

Breaking the Silence

I thought about ending it all many times, particularly in the 1960s and 70s when my children were grown. But I stayed. In 2005, a documentary filmmaker named Thomas Berger discovered administrative lists from these establishments in the Berlin archives. It is estimated that between 30,000 and 34,000 women were forced to serve in these capacities across Europe.

Thomas wrote to me. It took three months to respond. I wondered if I had the strength to destroy the image my children had of me. Finally, I said yes—not for myself, but for Simone and the others who didn’t survive.

The interview lasted four hours. I spoke of everything: the recruitment, the hotel, Room 13, and the dissociation. When I finished, I cried for the first time since 1944. I expelled the poison held back for sixty years. The documentary, The Forgotten of the War, aired in 2007.

My daughter came to see me two weeks after it was broadcast. She was crying and asked why I had never told her. I told her I didn’t want her to bear my burden. She hugged me and said she understood. My son, however, never spoke of it. I don’t know if he was hurt or angry; I never asked.

The Legacy of the Room

History often focuses on the most visible atrocities, but there are hidden horrors that are erased by shame and indifference. Acknowledging our existence means acknowledging that a system was conceived, organized, and legitimized by high commands to exploit the vulnerable. Richter was not a singular monster; he was a cog in a machine that transformed ordinary men into participants in a system of dehumanization.

Surprisingly, after the documentary, I received a letter from Richter’s daughter, Elga. She was seventy years old and had seen the film in Germany. She told me her father had been a loving schoolteacher who never spoke of the war and died peacefully in 1982. She asked for my forgiveness—not for him, but for her own ignorance.

We corresponded for two years. She struggled to reconcile the image of the patient father she loved with the methodical man I described. Our letters allowed her to face the truth without destroying herself. She died in 2009, having finally accepted her father as a complex, flawed human being.

Today, in 2010, I am ninety years old. My body is failing, but my memory is intact. I spent my life trying to find the girl I was before March 1943—that eighteen-year-old who dreamed of a simple life. She died in the Grand Étoile.

The worst part of this kind of trauma is not what they do to you, but what it does to your relationship with yourself. You become a stranger to yourself. But I have learned that I am not the one who should feel shame. The shame belongs to the system that created Room 13. I am Bernadette Martin, and by finally breathing, I have reclaimed the life that was stolen from me.