Ambush Of Palestro
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The Ambush of Palestro, or Ambush of Djerrah, took place on the 18th May 1956, during the
Algerian war The Algerian War, also known as the Algerian Revolution or the Algerian War of Independence,( ar, الثورة الجزائرية '; '' ber, Tagrawla Tadzayrit''; french: Guerre d'Algérie or ') and sometimes in Algeria as the War of 1 November ...
, near the village of Djerrah in the region of Palestro (now
Lakhdaria Lakhdaria (), is a town in northern Algeria, in the Bouïra Province. It is located 50 miles (75 km) south east of Algiers. It is surrounded by the Kabylie mountains, and by a 3 miles long river named oued Isser, passing by rocky mountains ...
) in
Kabylie Kabylia ('' Kabyle: Tamurt n Leqbayel'' or ''Iqbayliyen'', meaning "Land of Kabyles", '','' meaning "Land of the Tribes") is a cultural, natural and historical region in northern Algeria and the homeland of the Kabyle people. It is part of the ...
. A section of about forty men from the National Liberation Army (ALN) under the command of Lieutenant Ali Khodja ambushed a unit of 21 men from the 9th Colonial Infantry Regiment of the French Army commanded by Second Lieutenant Hervé Artur. The ambush led to the complete destruction of the small unit of French marines, with a total of 20 French soldiers killed, including their commander, Hervé Artur. One French soldier was taken prisoner and later released. Algerian losses are unknown, but thought to number around one killed and a few wounded.


Historical context

After the 1st November 1954, Algeria was at war. As the armed insurgency led by the National Liberation Front (FLN) grew in size, the French army's numbers fell, because Moroccan troops were returning to their now-independent country, a drop in effective strength of the units, and increasing numbers of desertions of Algerian
spahis Spahis () were light-cavalry regiments of the French army recruited primarily from the indigenous populations of Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco. The modern French Army retains one regiment of Spahis as an armoured unit, with personnel now r ...
and
tirailleur A tirailleur (), in the Napoleonic era, was a type of light infantry trained to skirmish ahead of the main columns. Later, the term "''tirailleur''" was used by the French Army as a designation for indigenous infantry recruited in the French c ...
s. President of the Council
Guy Mollet Guy Alcide Mollet (; 31 December 1905 – 3 October 1975) was a French politician. He led the socialist French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO) from 1946 to 1969 and was the French Prime Minister from 1956 to 1957. As Prime Minister ...
recalled available reservists to increase the military strength in Algeria to 200,000 soldiers. Recently elected to ensure "peace in North Africa," he nevertheless implemented a repressive policy and refused to negotiate on independence until a ceasefire was reached. It was also the first time a socialist government, supported by the Communists, decided to send in the army. In May 1956, the first recalled reservists landed in Algeria. The FLN, for its part, organized in September 1955, very shortly after the events of Constantine, one of its first propaganda operations.
Abane Ramdane Abane Ramdane (June 10, 1920 – December 26, 1957) was an Algerian political activist and revolutionary. He played a key role in the organization of the independence struggle during the Algerian war. His influence was so great that he was known ...
, head of the Algiers zone, invited into the Palestro maquis the French journalist , to whom were presented the demands of the independence movement; Barrat also met with djounoud, National Liberation soldiers.


Protagonists

The ambush pitted the
French Army The French Army, officially known as the Land Army (french: Armée de Terre, ), is the land-based and largest component of the French Armed Forces. It is responsible to the Government of France, along with the other components of the Armed For ...
against the Algerian National Liberation Army with, on the French side, the 2nd section of the 2nd
Battalion A battalion is a military unit, typically consisting of 300 to 1,200 soldiers commanded by a lieutenant colonel, and subdivided into a number of companies (usually each commanded by a major or a captain). In some countries, battalions are ...
of the 9th Colonial Infantry Regiment.Andrea Brazzoduro, « Comptes-rendus : Raphaëlle Branche, L’Embuscade de Palestro. Algérie 1956 » rchive sur Histoire@Politique, 18 March 2011 commanded by
Second Lieutenant Second lieutenant is a junior commissioned officer military rank in many armed forces, comparable to NATO OF-1 rank. Australia The rank of second lieutenant existed in the military forces of the Australian colonies and Australian Army until ...
Hervé Artur, and on the Algerian side part of the Ali Khodja commando unit, several groups with a total of some forty djounoud. Ali Khodja was born in
Algiers Algiers ( ; ar, الجزائر, al-Jazāʾir; ber, Dzayer, script=Latn; french: Alger, ) is the capital and largest city of Algeria. The city's population at the 2008 Census was 2,988,145Census 14 April 2008: Office National des Statistiques ...
on January 12, 1933. In October 1955, he deserted from the
Hussein Dey Hussein Dey (real name Hüseyin bin Hüseyin; 1765 – 1838; ar, حسين داي) was the last Dey of the Deylik of Algiers. Early life He was born either in İzmir or Urla in the Ottoman Empire. He went to Istanbul and joined the Canoneers ( ...
barracks with two others, carrying with them weapons, and joined the
maquis Maquis may refer to: Resistance groups * Maquis (World War II), predominantly rural guerrilla bands of the French Resistance * Spanish Maquis, guerrillas who fought against Francoist Spain in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War * The network ...
in Palestro led by
Amar Ouamrane Amar Ouamrane, nicknamed ''Bu qqaru'', was an Algerian revolutionary and an officer of the National Liberation Army (the paramilitary wing of the National Liberation Front) during the Algerian War. Biography Ouamrane was born on 19 January 19 ...
. Khodja was entrusted with the command of an ALN section with a strength of one hundred men. He soon distinguished himself in action, becoming the commando Ali Khodja, one of the legends of the ALN. To obtain weapons and clothing, the Khodja unit, like all other units of the NLA at that time, favored ambushes executed in accordance with the motto "Strike, Recover and Stall." Hervé Artur was born in Paris on September 17, 1926; after his military service in Algeria, he prepared a philosophy degree, which he abandoned for a job in a transport company. At the end of April 1956 he was recalled to military service and served with the rank of second lieutenant in the 9th Colonial Infantry Regiment stationed in
Kabylie Kabylia ('' Kabyle: Tamurt n Leqbayel'' or ''Iqbayliyen'', meaning "Land of Kabyles", '','' meaning "Land of the Tribes") is a cultural, natural and historical region in northern Algeria and the homeland of the Kabyle people. It is part of the ...
. This officer, who believed in the pacification of Algeria by the French army, commanded a section of twenty infantry consisting of two sergeants, two corporals, two corporals, and fourteen soldiers. Most were working-class in civilian life. On the morning of 18 May, the unit went on a reconnaissance mission to the villages near Ouled Djerrah. The guerilla attack lasted less than twenty minutes and ended in an ALN victory. Only five members of the 2nd section survived the ambush: sergeant Alain Chorliet, master corporal Louis Aurousseau, and Lucien Caron. The three were injured, as were two other men, Jean David-Nillet and Pierre Dumas. Gravely wounded, Caron was left with the kabyle villagers of the ''douar'', and the other survivors taken away by the moudjahideen. The two wounded men were entrusted to the villagers of the neighboring ''douar'', Bou Zegza. David-Nillet and Dumas were held as prisoners by Khodja, who retreated into the mountains.


Mutilations

At the moment of leaving the location of the ambush, the soldier Pierre Dumas taken prisoner, saw the elders of the neighboring village of Djerrah arrive. The press of the time reported uncritically that these residents began to mutilate the French soldiers. The true course of events is unknown but the mutilations were not on the scale reported. Lieutenant Artur's throat was cut and his men had knife marks all over their bodies. The eyes of some had been put out, but it was not possible to exclude animals as a cause of this. But '' gendarmes'' noted neither emasculations, nor eviscerations. Writings persist to this day that talk of lips and noses cut off, cut throats, eyes put out, throats cut, stomachs eviscerated and stuffed with pebbles, or testicles cut off. « La rencontre avec la mort 1956 ») According to and Évelyne Lever, "these mutilations were carried out by the survivors of the local population, the day after a particularly brutal '' ratissage'', or raid.
Yves Courrière Yves Courrière, real name Gérard Bon (12 October 1935 – 8 May 2012) was a French writer, biographer and journalist. Biography As a child Courrière read Albert Londres, Oscar Wilde and became passionate about adventure stories. As a journa ...
shared this point of view, specifying that the mutilations took place "after the death of the French soldiers."


23 May 1956: French retaliation

On May 19, not having heard from the 2nd section, the French Army sent three battalions and four helicopters to find them. In the helicopters were elements of the 4th squadron of the
13th Parachute Dragoon Regiment The 13e Régiment de Dragons Parachutistes ( en, 13th Parachute Dragoon Regiment) or 13e RDP is a special reconnaissance regiment of the French Army. It is a unit of the French Army Special Forces Command, the latter itself being under the Spec ...
(RDP) based at
Draâ El Mizan Draâ El Mizan is a town and commune in Tizi Ouzou Province in northern Algeria ) , image_map = Algeria (centered orthographic projection).svg , map_caption = , image_map2 = , capital = ...
. On May 23, the parachutists of the
1st Foreign Parachute Regiment The 1st Foreign Parachute Regiment (french: 1er Régiment Etranger de Parachutistes, 1er REP) was an airborne regiment of the Foreign Legion in the French Army which dated its origins to 1948. The regiment fought in the First Indochina War as th ...
(1st REP) and of the 20th Colonial Parachute Battalion (20th BPC) found 19 members of commando Ali Khodja fortified in a grotto with the two prisoners, near Tifrène. In the ensuing fighting sixteen moudjahideen were killed and three taken prisoner. Jean David-Nillet was accidentally killed in the assault, and the wounded Pierre Dumas was set free. Historian
Raphaëlle Branche Raphaëlle Branche (born 1972) is a French historian, professor of modern history at Paris Nanterre University. She is an expert on torture in the Algerian War, and more broadly on colonial violence and colonial wars Colonial war (in some con ...
notes that on the afternoon following discovery of the French bodies "forty-four Algerians were summarily killed" while "most, even the military admitted, were fleeing the encircling French troops north of the ambush location.". The village of Djerrah was also completely destroyed in reprisal. The actions of
Henri Maillot Henri François Maillot (1928 in Algiers – 1956) was a Pied-Noir member of the Algerian Communist Party and participated in the Algerian War. In 1956, Maillot deserted from his military unit, taking with him an important stock of arms and am ...
, a militant from the Algerian Communist Party (PCA) who had deserted a few weeks before with a truckful of weapons, has sometimes been juxtaposed to the ambush of May 18, 1956. This hypothesis was rejected by Branche, who underlined the hostility of the FLN towards Maillot's attempt to set up a ''maquis'' in the Ouarsenis region.


Consequences


Press

The Palestro ambush gave the French government reason to put into place strict information controls. Five days after the ambush, on May 21, 1956, , Armed Forces Secretary, sent General Henri Lorillot an instruction forbidding communication to the press of the numbers of military casualties. Also, a few days later, a code of conduct came to very strictly govern information on military operations in progress. Finally, a communiqué from resident minister Robert Lacoste forbade the press, without authorization, from identifying units engaged in fighting, disclosing casualties sustained by friendly forces, or the names of victims or other information "which might upset the interested families."


Executions

On 19 June 1956, a month after the ambush, two "rebels" condemned to death were executed,
Ahmed Zabana Ahmed Zabana ( ar, أحمد زبانة; real name: Ahmed Zahana, born 1926, died June 19, 1956) was an Algerian militant who participated in the outbreak of the Algerian War. He was executed by guillotine on June 19, 1956, in Algiers. Early life ...
and Abdelkader Ferradj. The choice of Zabana can easily be explained by his important role in the Algerian independence movement, but that of Ferradj seems to only be explained by his membership in the Ali Khodja commando group; he was accused by the press and by the resident minister of having participated in attacks prior to the Palestro ambush. These executions constituted "an answer" to the ambush. Some clues indicate that Aurousseau and Serreau, the two soldiers who disappeared from the Artur unit, were still alive at the beginning of June 1956, prisoners of the ALN and were possibly executed in reprisal for the deaths of Zabana et Ferradj.


Collective memory

According to historian Benjamin Stora, "Palestro would remain the most famous ambush of the war, a symbol of the worst that can happen: a surprise attack, impossible to defend against, mutilation of corpses. The military hierarchy was also adept at using this trauma to overcome reluctance." As a military event the ambush itself was not particularly significant, in terms of either casualties or the death of the particular officer commanding the section, the incident was well within the norms of 1956. The event nonetheless took on, in the following days and for very long afterwards, a particular importance, joining in the French imagination, next to the massacre in Constantinois on August 20, 1955 and, a year later, the , a triptych that supposedly symbolised the violence and savagery of the independence fighters. Official discourse, or in the media, associated with the "
fellagha The ''Fellagha'', an Arabic word literally meaning "bandits" (الفلاقة, singular الفلاق), refers to groups of armed militants affiliated with anti-colonial movements in French North Africa. It most often is used to refer to armed Alge ...
" an image of "savagery" and "fanaticism", proof of the "primitive character" of the Algerian being the ambush itself and the mutilations that accompanied it.. The word "massacre" came to be used rather than "ambush", as the event was initially called. Finally, the event itself took on a whole other meaning: it was no longer a defeat of the French Army, but violence that targeted — by assimilation — "civilians".


Insurrection of 1871

The creation of the French village of Palestro was decreed by
Napoléon III Napoleon III (Charles Louis Napoléon Bonaparte; 20 April 18089 January 1873) was the first President of France (as Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte) from 1848 to 1852 and the last monarch of France as Emperor of the French from 1852 to 1870. A nephew ...
in 1869, in the centre of an alluvial plain edged by mountains 80 km south-east of Algiers. The Isser
oued Wadi ( ar, وَادِي, wādī), alternatively ''wād'' ( ar, وَاد), North African Arabic Oued, is the Arabic term traditionally referring to a valley. In some instances, it may refer to a wet (ephemeral) riverbed that contains water onl ...
flows into this bowl after a course of four kilometers through the rocky defile of the gorges of Palestro. It is a strategic area between Kabylie and the
Mitidja Mitidja, (Arabic: , Berber: Mettijet ⵎⴻⵜⵙⵉⵛⵝ) is a plain stretching along the outskirts of Algiers in northern Algeria. It is about long, with a width of . Traditionally devoted largely to agriculture and serving as the breadbasket ...
coastal plain. It was named for the French victory at the
Battle of Palestro The Battle of Palestro was fought on 30–31 May 1859 between the Austrian Empire and the combined forces of the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont and France. The Franco-Piedmontese forces were victorious. It was fought just south to Palestro, a town i ...
. Less than three years after it was founded, during the revolt of
Cheikh Mokrani Sheikh Mohamed El-Mokrani ( ar, الشيخ محمد المقراني; ; d. 1871) was one of the principal leaders of the popular uprising of 1871 against the French occupation of Algeria. Early life Mohamed was a descendant of the rulers of t ...
, the village was attacked April 21, 1871, by 1,500 to 1,800 armed men. Roughly fifty colonists were killed in a few moments: among them were mayor of Palestro Dominique Bassetti, and the brigadier of the ''gendarmerie'', killed with an axe by three detainees freed by the insurgents. In 1991, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), then in 1992, the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria, installed their rear bases there. , has said that Djerrah (or Palestro) remains the symbol of a place that is difficult to control, where violence seems to almost take on a certain logic.


See also

*
Algerian War The Algerian War, also known as the Algerian Revolution or the Algerian War of Independence,( ar, الثورة الجزائرية '; '' ber, Tagrawla Tadzayrit''; french: Guerre d'Algérie or ') and sometimes in Algeria as the War of 1 November ...
* Battle of Bouzegza * Battle of Algiers


References


Sources and bibliography

* Raphaëlle Branche, L’Embuscade de Palestro : Algérie 1956, (The Palestro Ambush: Algeria 1956), Paris, Armand Colin, 2010, 256 p. (
read online
. * François Buton, « Peut-on dévoiler les imaginaires ? Questions sur l'interprétation d'un massacre », (Can One Unveil the Imaginary? Questions on the Interpretation of a Massacre), Le Mouvement Social, vol. 1, no 238,‎ 2012, p. 81-86. * Raphaëlle Branche, « Le récit historique et les intentions des acteurs. Réponse à François Buton », (The Historic Account and the Intentions of the Protagonists. Answer to François Buton) Le Mouvement Social, vol. 1, number 238,‎ 2012, p. 87-93. * Raphaëlle Branche, « 18 mai 1956 : l'embuscade de Palestro/Djerrah », (May 18, 1956: The Ambush at Palestro/Djerrah), in Abderrahmane Bouchène, Jean-Pierre Peyroulou, Ouanassa Siari Tengour and Sylvie Thénault, Histoire de l'Algérie à la période coloniale : 1830–1962, (History of Algeria to the Colonial Period: 1830-1962), Paris, Alger, Éditions La Découverte and Éditions Barzakh, 2012, 717 p. (), p. 514-519. * Ugo Iannucci, Soldat dans les gorges de Palestro.(Soldier in the Gorges of Palestro), Journal de guerre, Aléas, 2


Documentaries

* 2012 : Palestro, Algérie : histoires d'une embuscade, (Palestro, Algeria: Stories of an Ambush), by Rémi Lainé and Raphaëlle Branche (based on Raphaëlle Branche), length 1 h 25m, coproduction : ARTE France, Les Poissons Volant
on arte.tv
March 19, 2012, consulted 20 September 2013 archive


External links


« Palestro, Algérie : histoires d'une embuscade »
(Palestro, Algeria: Stories of an Ambush)
on the website of the Toulon section of the Ligue des droits de l'homme
(League of the Rights of Man), May 14, 2012 (consulted September 21, 2013).
« La conférence de presse du rescapé Pierre Dumas »
(Press Conference of Survivor Pierre Dumas) rchive Journal d'Alger May 27 and 28 1956. * Jean Taousson, « Palestro 1956 : le massacre des rappelés », Historia magazine, no 216,‎ February 21, 1972, p. 713-719. * Michel Sabourdy, « 18 mai 1956, Palestro, 20 morts : notre camarade Pierre Dumas, seul rescapé, raconte », (May 18, 1956, Palestro, 20 Dead: Our Comrade Pierre Dumas, Sole Survivor, Tells the Story), L'Ancien d'Algérie, number 117,‎ June 1974, p. 12
read online
.

(Passes and Gorges of Algeria) ideo on ina.fr, Les Actualités Françaises, 1 January 1949 (consulted on 2 June 2013).
«Kabylie 60 »
ideo on
ina.fr The (abbrev. INA), () is a repository of all French radio and television audiovisual archives. Additionally it provides free access to archives of countries such as Afghanistan and Cambodia. It has its headquarters in Bry-sur-Marne. Since 2006 ...
, Télévision Alger, 1 April 1962 (consulted June 2, 2013).
Avoir peur de Palestro
(Being Afraid of Palestro), available as a free download at the Internet Archive.
« Si Azzedine »
ideo on ina.fr,
Antenne 2 France 2 () is a French public national television channel. It is part of the state-owned France Télévisions group, along with France 3, France 4 and France 5. France Télévisions also participates in Arte and Euronews. Since 3:20 CET on 7 Ap ...
, aired 8pm, November 28, 1981 (consulted June 21, 2013). {{Algerian resistance against French invasion Conflicts in 1956 Palestro 1956 Urban warfare 1956 in France 1956 in Algeria Ambushes in Africa