For sixty-three years, I have lived with a memory that refuses to fade. Even now, at eighty-seven, I find myself looking back to a time when I believed that faith could serve as a literal shield against the harshness of the world. My name is Eliane Marceau. Today, I live in a quiet cottage in the countryside, far from the echoes of the city. But in September 1943, I was Sister Eliane, a twenty-four-year-old novice at the convent of Saint-Cyr, located just outside Paris.
I wore my habit with a sense of sacred duty, convinced that the cross I carried was an emblem that offered protection. I was mistaken. On a grey September morning, the peace of our sanctuary was shattered. I was in the convent library, the air thick with the scent of old parchment and beeswax, when I heard the heavy rhythm of boots on tile and orders shouted in a language that represented only fear to us.
The Violation of the Sanctuary
From the hallway, I saw our Mother Superior pressed against a stone wall by a soldier. Other sisters were kneeling, their hands trembling as armed men searched every corner of our home—cupboards, drawers, and even the pews of our chapel. In a moment of panic, I retreated to the library and locked the door, kneeling behind a tall oak shelf. I gripped my rosary so tightly that the beads left deep impressions in my skin, whispering prayers as if they could weave a veil of invisibility around me.
But the door was forced open. Two soldiers entered; one was older with a weary expression, the other a young man with a gaze that felt hollow. He pointed at me and spoke to his superior. The older man smiled—a look that remained with me for decades—and dragged me by my arms toward the courtyard. I called for help, but there was no one left to answer.
In the courtyard, a transport truck waited with its tarpaulin closed. I was ushered inside alongside several young women, all of whom were paralyzed by terror. As the engine roared to life, I realized that my identity as a nun made me a curiosity to our captors. One soldier removed my veil, exposing my short-cropped hair to the cold wind. It was a gesture designed to strip away my dignity, a violation that felt more profound than any physical blow.

Purgatory at Drancy
The truck traveled for what felt like an eternity before stopping at a place that would become my purgatory: Drancy. It was a transit camp, a labyrinth of barbed wire and wooden barracks. We were led into a freezing hangar that smelled of damp earth and desperation. Dozens of women sat along the walls, their stares blank and fixed.
On the third or fourth night, I was singled out. A soldier led me through a narrow, torch-lit corridor of icy cement to a small interrogation room. There sat an officer, impeccably dressed, with dark eyes that observed me as if I were a biological specimen.
“Sit down, little sister,” he said in precise French. He leaned forward, crossing his fingers. “So, you believe in a higher power?”
I nodded silently. He smiled—a cold, mirthless expression. “Interesting. Because that power does not exist here. We are going to dismantle your conviction. We want to show you that your idea of protection is an illusion.”
That night, he did not resort to physical force. Instead, he used words as a slow-acting poison, attempting to convince me that I had been abandoned. “They always end up denying,” he whispered as he sent me back to the hangar. “We will see.”
The Trial in the Courtyard
The following morning, the psychological pressure intensified. I was taken to the central courtyard, a place of mud and ice. In front of the other detainees and the guards, they forced me to my knees.
“Pray, little sister,” a guard commanded. They wanted a performance, a way to turn my sacred practice into a source of mockery. When I remained silent, a blow from a rifle butt sent me into the freezing mud. “Louder, so everyone can hear!”
I began to recite the words, my voice cracking against the wind. The guards laughed and imitated my tone, treating my deepest convictions as a cabaret show. They made me repeat phrases that were not my own, demanding I ask for mercy from the very forces that held us. If I faltered, I was forced to stand for hours in the rain, arms raised, holding a heavy stone until my muscles gave way.
I was losing weight rapidly; my habit hung on me like a tattered shroud. Yet, amidst the exhaustion and the cold, I realized something vital. They could control my body and they could force my lips to move, but they could not enter the small, invisible corner of my soul where my true faith resided. This realization became my secret fortress.
The Night of the Shadow
In November, the pressure reached its peak. Late one night, the officer returned. I was taken to an isolated building with a single, flickering lightbulb and a broken window through which the moon cast a pale, indifferent light.
I will not describe the events of that night in detail, for there are some things that words cannot convey without causing the listener to bleed along with the narrator. What I can say is that the physical pain was not the most difficult part. It was the laughter. The officer watched from the corner, smoking a cigarette, while his subordinates carried out his methodical orders. They tried to turn my prayers into a weapon against me, mocking the very essence of who I was.
When they finally left, I lay on the floor, unable to move or think. I felt as though my soul had already begun to depart from my body. But then, the door opened again. It was not a soldier, but an older woman—a fellow prisoner with grey hair and an expression of ancient sadness. She covered me with a thin, threadbare blanket and gave me a sip of water that tasted more precious than any fine wine.
“You’re going to survive,” she whispered hoarsely. “You have to. If you die here, they win. Every day you breathe is a victory. Every prayer you whisper in secret is proof that you are stronger than them.”
Those words pierced through the fog of my despair. I decided then that I would survive—not just for myself, but for the woman who held me, and for all those who would never leave that place.
The Flight Through the Snow
By February 1944, Drancy had become a place of frantic chaos. Transports were leaving every week for destinations whispered in terror. I felt my turn was approaching, but fear had been replaced by a detachment, as if I were already a ghost.
One morning, the sirens wailed as Allied forces bombed a nearby industrial site. In the confusion, I fled alongside three other women. We ran through the snow-covered forest, our feet cutting against the frozen ground. I didn’t look back until I collapsed from exhaustion. I was found by a French farmer who hid me in his barn and cared for me until the liberation months later.
When the war finally ended in 1945, I returned to Saint-Cyr. The convent had been bombed; the chapel was a pile of rubble, and many of my sisters were gone. I tried to resume my life as a nun, but the rituals felt hollow. My faith had not been lost, but it had been fundamentally altered by what I had witnessed. In 1947, I left the order and became a schoolteacher in a remote village, choosing a life of quiet service and even quieter solitude.
The Legacy of a Voice
For decades, I wore my silence like a second skin. It was only when my niece, Claire, begged me to speak that I agreed to record my testimony. “If you don’t speak, who will tell the world what happened?” she asked.
I passed away in 2015, but through Claire, my story continues. People often ask if I ever found the capacity to forgive. I honestly do not know. I do not know if forgiveness is something a human heart can truly grant for such systematic cruelty. What I do know is that I survived, and that survival was my final victory over the officer and the forces he represented.
The scars I carry are invisible. They do not bleed, but they are etched into my soul. For years, I struggled with the guilt of the survivor, wondering why I was spared when so many others were not. But I have learned that faith is what remains when everything else is torn away. It is that fragile light that shines at the bottom of the deepest abyss.
My name is Eliane Marceau. I was twenty-four when they tried to break me. Today, my voice resonates not in a chapel, but in the hearts of those who choose to remember. As long as there is someone to listen and refuse to forget, the darkness will not have won.
Thank you for carrying this burden with me. Thank you for not looking away.