The China Mail - Ex-Resistance Olympic torch-bearer still wants to 'change the world'

USD -
AED 3.67292
AFN 68.331908
ALL 83.20787
AMD 382.634731
ANG 1.789783
AOA 916.999908
ARS 1298.483398
AUD 1.535379
AWG 1.8015
AZN 1.698106
BAM 1.673054
BBD 2.018392
BDT 121.454234
BGN 1.67305
BHD 0.376976
BIF 2981.094953
BMD 1
BND 1.281694
BOB 6.907525
BRL 5.400904
BSD 0.999658
BTN 87.426861
BWP 13.378101
BYN 3.334902
BYR 19600
BZD 2.00793
CAD 1.37914
CDF 2890.000008
CHF 0.805735
CLF 0.024624
CLP 966.009881
CNY 7.18025
CNH 7.18455
COP 4046.29
CRC 505.132592
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.324209
CZK 20.945099
DJF 178.013114
DKK 6.38538
DOP 61.531223
DZD 129.658831
EGP 48.301115
ERN 15
ETB 140.789383
EUR 0.85552
FJD 2.254901
FKP 0.739045
GBP 0.73762
GEL 2.694993
GGP 0.739045
GHS 10.845883
GIP 0.739045
GMD 72.496617
GNF 8667.236955
GTQ 7.667237
GYD 209.056342
HKD 7.820065
HNL 26.167665
HRK 6.449404
HTG 130.804106
HUF 337.970497
IDR 16183.3
ILS 3.37492
IMP 0.739045
INR 87.45675
IQD 1309.495295
IRR 42124.999918
ISK 122.539855
JEP 0.739045
JMD 159.957228
JOD 0.708997
JPY 147.002502
KES 129.149997
KGS 87.3788
KHR 4004.22578
KMF 422.507518
KPW 899.956741
KRW 1388.870247
KWD 0.30549
KYD 0.83302
KZT 541.497006
LAK 21636.163779
LBP 89517.243149
LKR 300.889649
LRD 200.427716
LSL 17.579384
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.40633
MAD 9.00556
MDL 16.668948
MGA 4447.333867
MKD 52.634731
MMK 2099.016085
MNT 3589.3757
MOP 8.055945
MRU 39.986313
MUR 45.639835
MVR 15.41069
MWK 1733.339606
MXN 18.74209
MYR 4.213007
MZN 63.96021
NAD 17.579384
NGN 1531.819822
NIO 36.783576
NOK 10.17819
NPR 139.882806
NZD 1.687023
OMR 0.384497
PAB 0.999645
PEN 3.563216
PGK 4.15911
PHP 57.111003
PKR 283.614885
PLN 3.644412
PYG 7320.786997
QAR 3.644568
RON 4.332198
RSD 100.256002
RUB 79.849651
RWF 1447.476476
SAR 3.752394
SBD 8.223773
SCR 14.966809
SDG 600.443843
SEK 9.56345
SGD 1.282402
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.179702
SLL 20969.49797
SOS 571.257485
SRD 37.539778
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.958084
SVC 8.746792
SYP 13001.259394
SZL 17.573995
THB 32.448497
TJS 9.321608
TMT 3.51
TND 2.921557
TOP 2.342096
TRY 40.89616
TTD 6.782633
TWD 30.013498
TZS 2612.498965
UAH 41.258597
UGX 3558.597092
UYU 39.991446
UZS 12577.416595
VES 134.31305
VND 26270
VUV 119.348233
WST 2.651079
XAF 561.119404
XAG 0.026468
XAU 0.0003
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.801625
XDR 0.702337
XOF 561.126604
XPF 102.01882
YER 240.274978
ZAR 17.58619
ZMK 9001.200507
ZMW 23.166512
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    -0.3400

    14.61

    -2.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.17

    +0.35%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • AZN

    0.1700

    78.64

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    47.78

    +0.19%

  • NGG

    -0.2250

    71.335

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    61.29

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    0.0681

    38.87

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    -0.4150

    57.005

    -0.73%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    11.66

    +0.17%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    16.1

    -0.62%

  • BCC

    0.0100

    86.63

    +0.01%

  • BP

    0.2142

    34.355

    +0.62%

  • BCE

    0.0750

    25.445

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    0.0594

    13.3359

    +0.45%

  • CMSD

    0.0406

    23.3301

    +0.17%

Ex-Resistance Olympic torch-bearer still wants to 'change the world'
Ex-Resistance Olympic torch-bearer still wants to 'change the world' / Photo: © AFP

Ex-Resistance Olympic torch-bearer still wants to 'change the world'

At the age of 102, Melanie Berger-Volle will carry the Olympic torch as high as she can, despite her fragile shoulder, to champion the values of friendship between peoples that she defended during her time with the French Resistance in the Second World War.

Text size:

A "woman in the shadows" during the Occupation (1940-1944), Berger-Volle was thrilled to be chosen to carry the torch as it passes through Saint-Etienne on June 22 on its way to Paris for the start of the Olympic Games.

The weight of the torch has been a concern but there was never any question of turning it down.

"I've always loved sport," says the sprightly centenarian who until recently enjoyed an hour's walk a day.

Grandmother of the gymnast Emilie Volle, who took part in the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, she also wants to be a symbol for women "who have fought to play sport like men".

"My ideal has always been to unite the world," she says. "And the Olympics are a wonderful opportunity to get to know other human beings."

- 'Mistreated' -

Born in Austria in 1921 into a Jewish working-class family, Melanie Berger began her activism as a teenager in an extreme left-wing group.

"We were atheists and when I started fighting it wasn't for religious reasons, it was political," she says. "I'm against all dictatorships."

After the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938, she left her country, went to Belgium and then arrived in France, in Paris in the spring of 1939, disguised as a boy.

When France went to war later that year, all Austrians, even refugees, were seen as enemies and the authorities put her on a train to a camp near Pau.

At Clermont-Ferrand station, she "jumped out" of the carriage.

She was on her own as the other girls did not dare follow her.

"They weren't political, they didn't know what a camp was," she shrugs.

On the contrary, the young activist was well aware that "when you get a chance, you can't let it go by".

In 1940 after the French surrender to the Nazis, she found herself in Montauban, where a group of Trotskyist militants she had belonged to before the war was beginning to reform.

"With my French-sounding name, I rented a flat in a dilapidated house, and from there we were able to start work."

Discreetly, the group drafted and distributed German-language leaflets aimed at turning Reich soldiers.

In January 1942, however, that all came to an end when the police raided the house and she was arrested and brutally interrogated.

"I was mistreated, men beat me," she says quietly. "The after-effects are still with me. But I'm still here."

She avoided a death penalty and after 13 months in detention in Toulouse, the 22-year-old Berger was transferred to the Baumettes prison in Marseille.

Members of her group, together with the Resistance, prepared her escape.

- 'No' to Nazism -

On October 15, 1943, they came to get her, accompanied by a German soldier who had taken up the cause, while she was in hospital with jaundice.

"I escaped in my nightdress," she laughs.

Once recovered, she campaigned under false identities until the liberation in the summer of 1944.

After the war, she married Lucien Volle, another Resistance fighter who had taken part in the liberation of Le Puy-en-Velay.

Together, the couple began to devote themselves to the work of remembrance.

"We fought constantly to explain. Not what we had done but why we had done it," she says.

She has since been awarded a number of decorations, including the Legion d'Honneur.

"I didn't do much," she says. "But I did say 'no' to Nazism."

Worried again about the return of extremes in Europe, Berger-Volle hopes that young people will in turn be able to defend democracy.

And despite her advanced age, she intends to use the Olympics to get her message across.

"I wanted to change the world," she says with a smile. "And I still want to change it."

L.Johnson--ThChM