This is the harrowing historical account of Madeleine G., as recorded in 2002. Her testimony provides a rare and devastating look into the psychological and physical endurance required to survive one of the darkest chapters of the 20th century. This narrative has been reconstructed to preserve the emotional weight of her words while adhering to modern digital safety standards.
The Weight of Silence
“My name is Madeleine. Today, I am 78 years old. I am sitting in my small kitchen in Annecy, watching the snow fall against the glass. It is a peaceful silence—the kind I have sought my entire life—but it is also a silence that has begun to weigh too heavily. For fifty-eight years, I kept my memories sheltered. I didn’t want to poison the lives of my husband or my children with the images that haunt my sleep.
But my heart is tired now, and I refuse to take the truth of Room 47 into the earth with me. I remember everything. I remember the smell of fear as if it were yesterday. In 1944, I was twenty years old. I worked in a bakery on Rue des Trois Rois in Lyon. Despite the hardships of the era, the smell of flour and the warmth of the oven provided a simple, honest life. I didn’t know then that heat would eventually become my greatest enemy.
Everything shifted on a Tuesday morning at 8:00 AM. Three men in long black leather coats—the secret police—entered the bakery. They didn’t shout; they simply said my name. I felt a polar cold invade my lungs. They dragged me outside in front of the neighbors and threw me into a black car. I didn’t know where they were taking me, but I knew the girl I had been died on that sidewalk. Ten minutes later, I saw the high gray walls of Montluc Prison.”

The Threshold of Montluc
“The iron gate groaned as it opened—a sound that tore through my stomach. Inside, the air smelled of stale confinement and a scent I couldn’t identify at first: the smell of pure anguish. I was no longer a person; I was a file, a cell number. In the inner courtyard, I met the others. There was Élise, only eighteen and trembling so violently her teeth chattered. There was Marie-Claire, forty years old, with a gaze of iron that defied our captors.
We were packed eight to a cell designed for one. There were no beds, only dirty straw. The heat was suffocating, and the sound of keys in locks made us all jump. But hunger and discomfort were nothing compared to the screams we heard at night. After a week, a guard read a list of names. Marie-Claire, a woman named Simone, and I were led down a spiral staircase. The further we descended, the heavier the air became. It smelled of chemicals—sharp, like bleach, but much stronger—mixed with the scent of something burning.
We stopped in front of a metal door painted with the number 47. The guards were laughing, calling it ‘time for the wash.’ Inside, the room was clinical: white tiles, flickering neon lights, and large metal vats filled with a steaming, transparent liquid. That is where I saw Hélène, a woman in a white blouse with eyes as empty as an automaton, and a man named Schmidt, who held a notebook and a pen. They viewed us not as humans, but as biological subjects.”
The Protocol of Room 47
“Everything was taken from us: our clothes, our modesty, our names. Schmidt ran his cold, gloved hands over my skin as if assessing a piece of fabric. He turned to Marie-Claire and said she looked like she had ‘tough skin’—a perfect subject for his disinfection protocol. They forced her onto a metal table. Hélène dipped a sponge on a long iron clamp into one of the steaming vats.
As soon as the chemical touched Marie-Claire’s skin, a scream tore through the room that I can only describe as the sound of a soul being physically broken. Her skin turned bright red instantly, and blisters formed before our eyes. Hélène moved methodically, passing the sponge over her body. Everywhere it touched, the skin seemed to dissolve, leaving the flesh raw. Schmidt noted everything in his book, timing the reaction with a stopwatch.
It was then I understood: this wasn’t just about causing pain. It was a laboratory. They were testing chemical stripping agents on human subjects. When it was my turn, I closed my eyes and tried to think of the smell of warm bread, but reality caught up with me when the first drop touched my chest.
At first, it felt like a bite. Then, the pain spread like a forest fire. It was an absolute assault on the senses. It felt as though molten lead were being poured over me, gnawing through every layer of my skin. I couldn’t even scream; my throat was knotted by panic. Schmidt leaned over me and whispered, ‘Breathe, Madeleine, it’s science.’ After the application, they gave us burlap tunics. The coarse, rough fibers sank into our raw flesh like thousands of red-hot needles. Every movement was an ordeal.”
The Science of Dehumanization
“We returned to Room 47 every two days. The Nazi system was a machine designed to grind down dignity. In the mornings, we were woken at 5:00 AM for roll call. We had to stand still for hours. If a guard saw a tear, they would strike us. A guard with a scar, Hans, took pleasure in pulling our burlap tunics to rasp against our wounds.
Marie-Claire was our strength. She would whisper, ‘Become stone, Madeleine. Don’t let them see your eyes.’ In the cell, we shared a single bucket. The smell was unbearable as our flesh began to show signs of infection. Eventually, eighteen-year-old Élise was brought down to Room 47. Schmidt examination revealed that my skin was regenerating slowly, so he increased the concentration of the solution.
Élise’s first contact with the chemical provoked a scream that made the glass vials vibrate. She begged for her mother, but in Room 47, there was no mercy. We were left naked on the tables for an hour to observe the nervous reactions. Back in the cell, Élise’s condition worsened. She developed a fever and began to hallucinate about her home in the countryside. She died in her sleep a week later. Her death was a turning point for me. I didn’t just want to survive anymore; I wanted to testify. I wanted them to pay for what they did to that child.”
The Breakdown of the System
“As the Allied forces drew closer to Lyon in August 1944, the tension in the prison reached a breaking point. The guards were nervous, burning files in the courtyard. Schmidt was no longer a calm scientist; he was a man possessed by a frantic need to finish his ‘work.’ He viewed the destruction of our bodies as the only way to understand ‘rebirth.’
On August 17th, he took Marie-Claire and me down for the last time. He used an oily, yellow solution. When he poured it on Marie-Claire, she let out a scream that still haunts my nights. But in a final surge of life, she managed to free a hand and scratch Schmidt’s face. He recoiled in rage, and a guard struck her down. I never saw her again. She was left in that room as they began to ‘liquidate’ the building.
I was thrown into a different cell with dozens of others, waiting for an execution that we were certain was coming. We had heard of the horrors at Fort de Saint-Genis-Laval, where prisoners were harmed en masse. I stayed in a corner, my skin burning, the burlap tunic fused to my wounds by dried blood.”
Liberation and the Scars of War
“On August 24, 1944, a heavy silence fell over Montluc. No boots, no engines, no screams. Then, we heard French voices. A man with a tricolor armband appeared and told us we were free. But for me, the word meant nothing. The August sun hit my raw skin as I walked into the courtyard, and I screamed. The air felt like razors.
I spent three months in a hospital. The doctors had never seen such injuries. They didn’t understand the chemical nature of the burns. My dressings had to be changed under anesthesia. Slowly, the skin grew back, but it was different—thin, fragile, and marked by the memory of the vats.
To understand the scope of what happened at Montluc and across occupied Europe, we can look at the recorded data from the era.”
The Nature of Medical Atrocities
The “experiments” described by Madeleine were part of a broader pattern of unethical medical research conducted during the war. These acts were later prosecuted during the Nuremberg Trials, specifically the Doctors’ Trial of 1946-1947, which led to the creation of the Nuremberg Code—a set of research ethics principles for human experimentation.
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Forced Exposure: Victims were subjected to chemical agents, extreme temperatures, and biological pathogens without consent.
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Documentation: Detailed notes were often kept, reflecting a chillingly detached view of human suffering as “data.”
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Long-term Impact: Survivors often dealt with chronic pain, disfigurement, and profound psychological trauma (PTSD).
A Final Testimony
“For fifty-eight years, I have carried Room 47 on my back. My skin has healed, but my soul remains marked by that yellow liquid and the smell of bleach. I went to Villeurbanne to find Élise’s mother, as I promised. I told her her daughter wasn’t afraid. It was the only gift I could give her.
I speak today because the witnesses are disappearing. When the last of us is gone, the only thing left will be the stones of Montluc. Do not let them tell you it didn’t happen. Do not let the silence return. My name is Madeleine, and I have finally set down my burden.”
Key Historical Figures of the Lyon Occupation
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Klaus Barbie: Known as the “Butcher of Lyon,” he was the head of the Gestapo in Lyon and responsible for the torture and death of thousands.
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Jean Moulin: A high-profile Resistance leader who was captured and interrogated at Montluc before his death.
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The Children of Izieu: 44 Jewish children who were captured under Barbie’s orders and deported from the region.
Madeleine’s story serves as a vital reminder of the resilience of the human spirit in the face of absolute dehumanization. Her courage to break her silence ensures that the victims of Room 47 are never truly forgotten.