Jean-Marie Bergeret
'''Jean Bergeret was a French aviation General.
Biography
Source:After World War I, he attended the École supérieure de guerre and joined the Aviation Staff, in 1928. From December to August 1939, he served as chief of the Third Bureau of the Air Force Staff, and just before the war began, he was promoted to brigadier general.
After the Armistice of 22 June 1940, in which he was part of the French delegation, he was appointed secretary of state for aviation by Marshal Pétain on, replacing General Bertrand Pujo. He held this position until Pierre Laval's return on, when he was succeeded by General Jean-François Jannekeyn. Bergeret was then appointed inspector of territorial air defense.
On, the Commissariat-General for Jewish Affairs submitted a proposal to the Vichy government for a law revising the Statute on Jews of October 1940. Only one ministry, the Secretariat of State for Aviation, insisted on stricter provisions. On, it informed the vice president of the council that, unlike other administrations, it had refused to assign alternative positions to Jews removed from their posts. The SEA collaborated with the Reich's Ministry of Aviation, led by Generals Ernst Udet and Erhard Milch, and the German Military Command in France, which supervised the French aviation industry in occupied zones, expanding its anti-Jewish actions during the German-Soviet conflict in June 1941. Bergeret aggressively targeted Jewish industrialists, including Marcel Bloch and Paul-Louis Weiller.
A few days after Operation Torch, during which Allied forces landed in North Africa on, Bergeret rallied to General Giraud and served as deputy high commissioner for civil and military command in North Africa. The Vichy regime subsequently stripped him of French citizenship.
He received the Order of the Francisque.
At the end of 1943, the French Committee of National Liberation in Algiers initiated legal proceedings against Bergeret. He was arrested on. Referred to the High Court of Justice for trial, he was provisionally released in, and a final dismissal of charges was granted on.
Jean Bergeret had three children with Hélène Disle: Anne-Marie, Jean-Pierre, and Françoise.
Filmography
- 1975: Section spéciale, directed by Costa-Gavras; role played by Jean-Marie Robain.