Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Sometimes Only One Person Stands Up!



While watching this brief video my thoughts turned immediately to the Dreyfus case, and the persistence and courage of Lt. Colonel Georges Picquart in exposing the truth.  I wonder what it was that motivated Colonel Picquart?

Marie Georges Picquart (Strasbourg, 6 September 1854 – Amiens, 18 January 1914), was a French army officer and Minister of War. He is best known for his role in exposing the truth in the Dreyfus Affair.

Major Picquart served as an officer of Tirailleurs (native infantry) in French Algeria before being appointed to the General Staff in Paris. As a staff officer he acted as reporter of the debates in the first Dreyfus court martial for the then Minister of War and the Chief of the General Staff. Picquard was subsequently promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel on 6 April 1896. When appointed chief of the army's intelligence section (Deuxième Bureau, service de renseignement militaire) in 1896, Picquart discovered that the memorandum (the bordereau) that had been used to convict Captain Alfred Dreyfus had been the work of Major Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy. Several high ranking generals warned Colonel Picquart to conceal his discovery but Picquart persisted and continued his investigation. In this he was hindered and sabotaged by subordinate officers, notably Major Henry. As a consequence Picquart was relieved of duty with the Deuxième Bureau and sent (December 1896) to regimental duty in Tunis.

After the trial of Émile Zola, Picquart was himself accused of forging the note that had convinced him of Esterhazy's guilt. He was then arrested for forgery and was waiting for a court martial during the period that the French Supreme Court was reviewing the Dreyfus case. After the second court-martial - held as a consequence of the conclusions of the Supreme Court - Picquart resigned from the army but the exoneration of Alfred Dreyfus in 1906 also absolved Picquart, who was, by an act of the Chamber of Deputies, promoted to brigadier-general. General Picquart subsequently entered Georges Clemenceau's first cabinet as Minister of War. He held that position for the entire duration of the Clemenceau Cabinet, from 25 October 1906 to 24 July 1909.

2 comments:

My Daily Struggles said...

I know I could end up being shipped off to Supermax for posting this. You're not allowed to praise government officials, I know that -- and I am proceeding with the full knowledge that what I have done is wrong in the eyes of the Justice Department.

So be it!

My Daily Struggles said...

I loved that part of Claire Hirshfield's lecture when she talked about Piquart being sent off to North Africa to silence him.