Olivier Wieviorka

Olivier Wieviorka (born 1960), is a French historian specializing in the history of World War II and the French Resistance. He is a faculty member at the École normale supérieure de Cachan.

He is known for his controversial claim that, during World War II, Canadian First Nations soldiers scalped their prisoners.[1]

Biography

He is the brother of Michel Wieviorka.

His paternal grandparents, Polish Jews, were arrested in Nice during World War II and died at Auschwitz. His father, a refugee in Switzerland, and his mother, daughter of a Parisian tailor and a refugee in Grenoble, survived the war.[2]

gollark: Wow, it does equally badly on kind of generic terms.
gollark: ++search heat
gollark: ++eval-polish + 1 1
gollark: ++ping
gollark: ++exec```haskellhaskell```

References

  1. Ward, John (November 8, 2010), "Des Autochtones accusés d'avoir scalpé pendant la Deuxième Guerre", La Presse (in French).
  2. "Annette Wieviorka". Archived from the original on 2012-04-22. Retrieved 2018-03-02.
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