Nécrologie
Philippe de Gunzbourg
n'est plus
Philippe de Gunzbourg, "Philibert, Edgar" dans la Résistance, vient de nous quitter. Homme simple et courageux, d'une grande sensibilité, il fut pendant la Résistance un des responsables du réseau "Hilaire".

II exerça ses activités dans le Gers, le nord des Landes, le Lot-et-Garonne et la Dordogne-sud. Fin 1943, il s'occupait plus particulièrement de ce secteur. Recherché par la Gestapo,
il n'a cependant jamais voulu quitter le sol du Sud-Ouest, en dépit des dangers courus. Ses amis n'oublieront pas son attftude exemplaire. A la Libération, il se consacra à l'agriculture, à l'agro-alimentaire, aux pruneaux. II fut, entre autres, l'un des pionniers de France-Prune, et son premier président. Le Lot-et-Garonne a perdu un homme de cœur et de grand dévouement, la Résistance un des siens.

Un grand bonhomme nous a quittés.
Philippe de Gunzbourg repose à présent dans le petit cimetière de Saint-Léon, dans ce coin de terre du Sud-Ouest qu'il aimait tant.

Les anciens du réseau
Le Petit Bleu du 22 juillet 1986




OBITUARY

BARON PHILIPPE de GUNZBOURG
Maquis contribution to the D-Day battle

Baron Philippe de Gunzbourg, whose mettle was displayed is his exploits with the Special Operations Executive's French section during the Second World War, died on July 10.
The son of a Russian banker and a French mother, de Gunzbourg never felt at ease in the cosmopolitan Jewish world of his parents, and, as a young man, he was a playboy and a rebel.
When the French Army demobilized in 1940, he rejected all thoughts of emigrating to safety and chose instead to buy a farm near Agen in the unoccupied zone. As early as 1941, he made contact with a British emissary of the SOE's French section and began working for the organization.
By 1943, when the Germans occupied the whole of France, his involvement had grown and he sent his wife Antoinette, their two children and English nanny to the safety of Switzerland.
Under the command of George Starr, one of the SOE's most successful agents in south-west France, de Gunzbourg assumed responsibility for the area around Sarlat, Bergerac and the northern Lot-et-Garonne. He proved himself an outstanding organizer, welding those around him into an effective fighting force and frustrating German attempts to destroy it.
His achievements bore fruit June, 1944, at the time of the Normandy landings, when
the Germans needed withoutdelay to transfer their 2nd SS Panzer Division (Das Reich) through his fief to the Normandy battlefield.
Ordered from the neighbourhood of Toulouse on D+1, the Reich division was scheduled to reach the battle front - where its heavy tanks of the newest type might well have had decisive effect on D+3..
In the event, the division received such harassment from de Gunzbourg's section, and at the hands of other SOE-organized Maquis further north, that the move took seventeen days - a delay of strategic significance at a time when the Allies were fighting fiercely to consolidate and extend their beach-head foot-hold. and would have regarded with considerable anxiety the addition of another first- class, fully-equipped, armoured division to the German defence.
As it was, by the time the Reich division move into its lagers close to the battlefield on D+17, it was with fighting qualities and morale much in undermined by the attacks of the guerillas.
Many felt that de Gunzbourg's MBE (military) was scant recognition of his role in these events.
After the war, he devoted much time and considerable resources to the problems of those who had been his companions-in-arms; and despite a considerable local standing he never sought political office (…)