Transforming the former Bobigny deportation station into a place of remembrance. This is the objective of the work begun in September 2020 in Seine-Saint-Denis. Unfortunately, due to the health crisis, the worksite was delayed. The site was finally ready to welcome visitors on Wednesday, January 18, 2023. The former Bobigny deportation station was then officially inaugurated as a " Memorial " on July 18, 2023. This date was not chosen at random, as it marks the 80th anniversary of the departure of Convoy 57, the first transport of deportees to the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp in Poland.
Few know it, butBobigny's former train station bears traces of the darkest hours in our history. Built in the early 1930s, this Parisian station closed to passenger traffic in 1939, before becoming a site for the deportation of French Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau during the Second World War. Between July 1943 and August 1944, 22,407 Jews of all ages, mainly held at the Drancy camp just over 2 km away, were loaded into leaded wagons from the Bobigny freight station. Prior to this, convoys departed from the Bourget station, also in Seine-Saint-Denis. In all, 21 convoys left Bobigny for Auschwitz-Birkenau, with the exception of convoy 73, bound for Lithuania and Estonia, and convoy 79 for Buchenwald.
Since the end of the Second World War, many have been fighting for the former Bobigny deportation station to become a place of remembrance. In 2023, the project will finally see the light of day. But the road has been long and full of pitfalls.
It all began in 2005 with the departure of the scrap dealer and the transfer of part of the site to the City of Bobigny. That same year, the former Bobigny deportation station was added to the supplementary inventory of historic monuments. A new milestone was reached in 2011, with the signing of a cooperation agreement between SNCF Chairman Guillaume Pepy and Bobigny Mayor Catherine Peyge(PC), in the presence of Serge Klarsfeld and Simone Veil, who was deported to Auschwitz from Bobigny in April 1944.
Four long years of design and study followed. Then, following a competition launched in 2016, the project management for the overall development was entrusted to a consortium of Dutch landscape architects and scenographers, OKRA, and the architectural firm Philippe Prost. Work to transform the former Bobigny deportation station into a memorial will begin in September 2020. Cost? 4.5 million euros. The project's many partners include the Ministry of Defense, the SNCF, the Île-de-France Region, the Seine-Saint-Denis Department, the Fondation du Patrimoine, the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah, the Mémorial de la Shoah, theAFMA and theConvoi 73 association.
Until now, Bobigny's former deportation station has only opened its doors on the rarest of occasions. But as of Wednesday, January 18, 2023, the site is finally open to the general public from Wednesday to Sunday. This 3.5-hectare former railway site has been completely redeveloped into a genuine place of remembrance, and is open to the public on free tours and guided tours (with a charge) starting in February. The aim? To offer visitors an educational trail divided into two parts. Adèle Purlich, site manager, and Bernard Saint-Jean, project manager for the City of Bobigny, explain.
The visit begins with the " Esplanade du présent " . Offering a global view of the site, this area enables visitors to learn more about Bobigny's former deportation station through a historical overview of the site. Explanatory panels explain the history of the Drancy camp, the Bourget and Bobigny stations, the genocide of French Jews and the Bobigny station as a former industrial site.
The open-air visit continues on the esplanade-garden, where emotions run high as we discover extracts from the testimonies of deportees inscribed on panels and wooden steles. One of the wooden steles reads: " Embarquement fait le 18-7-43 au matin à 6.30 en Gare de Bobigny (Seine) de façon inhumaine et bestiale - Jacques Baltar - Convoi n° 57 du 18 juillet 1943 ".
The emotion rises another notch as we enter the second part: the " Espace de la mémoire ". Here, we discover the site's historic, sanctuarized heart. There's the goods hall, renovated in 2014, the original cobblestones trodden by the deportees and restored for the occasion, but also the famous travellers' building. Now condemned, but soon to be restored, this building was probably the last civilian building seen by the deportees.
We also see 75 commemorative steel steles in reference to the dozens of convoys of Jewish deportees who left France between 1942 and 1944.
Nearby, the site also features a huge steel map listing the main assembly camps in France. And then, of course, there are the railroad tracks on which the convoys were formed, and Paul Eluard's phrase, engraved on the wall running alongside the rails: " If the echo of their voices falters, we shall perish ", paying tribute to the many deportees.
And let's not forget the kinetic wooden fence at the entrance to the site, overlooking Avenue Henri Barbusse and symbolizing the 21 convoys that left Bobigny.
But don't expect to see any wagons, as is the case at the Drancy memorial. The site of the former deportation station in Bobigny relies on discreet signage. The site has also sought to protect and conserve existing biodiversity, in particular overgrown vegetation.
All in all, this open-air tour lasts around an hour (be sure to bundle up in winter, as the site is exposed to the wind) and provides an insight into the history of this historic site. It is also a place where the history of the Shoah can be taught, and a space dedicated to commemoration and meditation.
The Memorial at the former Bobigny deportation station is planning a commemorative evening on January 27, the day of remembrance of genocide and prevention of crimes against humanity. It was also on January 27, 1945, that the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp was liberated. This commemorative evening will take place in the goods hall. Theofficial inauguration of this place of remembrance is scheduled for July 18, 2023, the 80th anniversary of the departure of convoy 57.
Dates and Opening Time
Starts January 18, 2023
Location
Former Bobigny deportation station
151 Avenue Henri Barbusse
93000 Bobigny
Official website
garedeportation.bobigny.fr
More information
Self-guided tours (historical and memorial trail): free Guided tours: chargeable - 6 euros full price / 4 euros for under-18s These guided tours are organized by Seine-Saint-Denis Tourisme. Information: tourisme93.com School tours: organized by the Drancy Shoah Memorial, a partner of the site.