Wallonie Libre
Wallonie libre is a minor political party active in Wallonia in Belgium which originated as a group active within the resistance in German-occupied Belgium during World War II. Affiliated with the Walloon Movement, its ideology became increasingly radical in the post-war period.
History
Resistance group, 1940–44
Wallonie libre originated as a political association of Walloon migrants in Brussels known as the Walloon Guard in the 1930s. It was heavily influenced by the radical Walloon Movement which supported the secession of Wallonia and its merger into France.The group was re-formed in the aftermath of the Battle of Belgium to provide aid to the French which were still fighting Nazi Germany. Wallonie libre was purportedly established on 18 June 1940 during the Garde's annual gathering to commemorate the anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo which coincided with the radio broadcast of the Appeal of 18 June by the French General Charles de Gaulle. The name Wallonie libre was consciously chosen as a counterpart to de Gaulle's own France libre.
Wallonie libre is therefore sometimes credited as the earliest Belgian Resistance group. During the occupation, Wallonie libre produced an underground newspaper called La Wallonie Libre and another in Liège entitled Sambre et Meuse. Although broadly socialist and liberal in political orientation, it became close to parts of the Communist Party of Belgium in 1941. In August 1942, it was absorbed into the national left-wing faction Front de l'Indépendance.