Background
Madeleine grew up in the Somme region, surrounded by memories of the First World War.
journalist war correspondent poet
Madeleine grew up in the Somme region, surrounded by memories of the First World War.
She was 15 years old when war with Germany was declared. In May 1940, the Luftwaffe strafed a column of refugees from the Somme in which she was fleeing for the unoccupied South-West. Following this, she decided to move to Paris and fight against the Nazis.
She began operating for the French Forces of the Interior at the age of 18 under the codename "Rainer", participating in several operations against occupying Nazi forces and contributing to the capture of 80 Wehrmacht soldiers from an armoured German supply train.
On July 23, 1944, at age 20, she became infamous for the killing of a German officer, whom she shot dead in broad daylight on a bridge overlooking the river Seine. Shortly afterwards, she was captured by the Gestapo and taken to their Headquarters at Rue des Saussaies before being transferred to Fresnes Prison.
Following her torture and a date being set for her execution, she was finally released in a prisoner exchange. She immediately returned to fight in the Resistance with the aim of freeing Paris from Nazi occupation.
After the liberation of Paris, she and her comrades continued the fight against the Nazis until the end of the War.
After the war ended in 1945, she became a journalist, and reported on the Algerian War for the French communist newspaper L"Humanité. In 1946, she met with Ho Chi Minh in Paris and vowed to devote her life to Vietnam. She moved to South Vietnam, and lived with the Viet Congress resistance for 7 years, covering their fight during the Vietnam War.
There, she published Au Nord Vietnam, écrit Sous Les Bombes and made a documentary film entitled Dans Le Maquis du Sud-Vietnam, documenting their methods of guerrilla warfare.
Upon her return to France, she worked as a nursing assistant in a Paris hospital, where she wrote the best-seller Les Linges De Louisiana Nuit, and published an anthology of poetry, Cheval Rouge: Anthologie Poétique, 1939-1972. Madeleine Riffaud was awarded the National Order of Merit (France) in Paris on February 26, 2013 for her contributions to France and the world.
Riffaud wrote poetry throughout the war and during her career as a journalist. Pablo Picasso drew her portrait for the frontispiece of Le Poing Fermé (The Closed Fist), her collection of poems published in 1945.
Her autobiographical account of her time in the Resistance was published in 1994 entitled On L"appelait Rainer, referencing the nom de guerre that she adopted during that time.
She has also starred in a number of documentaries about her life.