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Jacqueline Netter-Minne-Guerroudj (27 April 1919 – 18 January 2015)[1] was a Frenchwoman condemned to death as an accomplice of Fernand Iveton during the Algerian War.[2] She was never executed, partly due to a campaign on her behalf conducted by Simone de Beauvoir.[3]
Jacqueline Guerroudj | |
---|---|
Born | April 27, 1919 |
Died | January 18, 2015 | (aged 95)
Other names | Jacqueline Netter-Minne-Guerroudj |
Spouses |
She was born to a well-off bourgeois family of Alsatian Jews in Rouen in 1919. She arrived in Algeria in 1948 as the wife of Pierre Minne, a professor of philosophy.[4] She remarried in 1950 to Abdelkader Guerroudj (nicknamed "Djilali"), an activist in the FLN. On 4 December 1957 Guerroudj's daughter by her first marriage, Danièle Minne, was sentenced to 7 years in prison by a tribunal for juveniles.[5] Guerroudj died on 18 January 2015 in Algiers, Algeria.
Published works
edit- Des douars et des prisons (in French). Bouchene. 1993. ISBN 9782841090037.
References
edit- ^ Jacqueline Guerroudj at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (in French)
- ^ "Décès de la moudjahida Jacqueline Guerroudj" (in French). Algerie Presse Service. 19 January 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-06-11.
- ^ Tidd 1999, p. 111.
- ^ Dore-Audibert 1995, p. 142.
- ^ Dore-Audibert 1995, p. 146.
- Dore-Audibert, Andrée (1995). Des Françaises d'Algérie dans la Guerre de libération: des oubliées de l'histoire (in French). KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 978-2-86537-574-5.
- Tidd, Ursula (1999). Simone de Beauvoir, Gender and Testimony. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-42660-2.