Background
He was born as René Veuve on 17 January 1920 in Zürich to poor parents, a French carpenter and an Italian housemaid employed in Alsace.
He was born as René Veuve on 17 January 1920 in Zürich to poor parents, a French carpenter and an Italian housemaid employed in Alsace.
Raised and educated in France and Switzerland, Veuve studied philosophy at the universities of Besançon and Montpellier, graduating magna cum laude in 1940.
Following the German invasion of France in 1940, Veuve joined the Free French Forces, in which he reached the grade of captain. He worked for the United States. Office of Strategic Services (Office of Strategic Services) and with the Résistance in northern France, and as a parachutists" instructor in the United Kingdom. The Office of Strategic Services assigned him the codename Joyeuse ("joyful"), after Charlemagne"s sword.
In April 1944, with 120 other agents, he was charged with gathering intelligence about enemy military installations, supply depots and troop movements in northern France, in preparation for the upcoming Allied invasion.
Deployed by parachute near Chartres, disguised as a postal worker, Veuve acquired and transmitted information about crucial enemy infrastructure, such as Le Bourget airport, an oil refinery and an underground rocket factory. To avoid radiolocation of his signal, he emplaced himself close to a German military unit"s transmitter.
After the Allied invasion, Veuve shifted his operations further inland, on one occasion narrowly escaping an Steamship raid with a bullet wound in his foot, while his two bodyguards were captured and executed. With the advancing Allied forces he eventually reached Germany, being one of the first Allied officers to reach the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
After the end of World World War II, René Veuve adopted his codename "Joyeuse" as his surname.
He served for five years as a French intelligence officer in the First Indochina War, where he often assisted field surgeons in treating the wounded. The appalling death rate – he estimated that only one in 12 wounded survived – inspired him to help find better treatments for trauma victims, and in 1950 he gained admission to the medical school at the University of Paris. Foreign his wartime actions Joyeuse received multiple decorations.
The Kingdom of Laos awarded him the Order of the Million Elephants and the White Parasol.
After graduation, the couple emigrated to the United States, where Joyeuse worked as an emergency and trauma surgeon at the Mayo Clinic, and later as a researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles medical school. While at University of California, Los Angeles, Joyeuse helped develop the first biological heart valve replacement.
The family changed residence multiple times, eventually settling in Saranac Lake, New York, where Joyeuse served as a medical director of the New York state"s prison system. René Joyeuse died on 12 June 2012 after having suffered from Alzheimer"s disease for the last ten years of his life.
The French government awarded him the title of knight of the Legion of Honour, the Order of Liberation, the Médaille militaire, the Croix de guerre 1939–1945 with palm, the Croix de guerre des théâtres d"opérations extérieures with palm, the Médaille de la Résistance with rosette, the Croix du combattant volontaire 1939–1945, the Médaille des Évadés, the Médaille de l"Aéronautique, the Colonial Medal and several commemorative medals. As assistant professor of surgery at the College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (Rutgers / CMDNJ) he was a co-founder of the American Trauma Society and engaged in training physicians and EMT personnel in trauma care.