Brigitte Friang

Brigitte Friang(1924-2011 [1] ) was a French journalist and writer.

She was born in Paris in 1924 and immediately after leaving school in Paris in 1943 joined the French resistance.[1] Working in the same group as Colonel F. F. E. Yeo-Thomas, she was captured by the Gestapo, shot while trying to escape, then taken to Fresnes Prison and tortured, before being deported to Ravensbrück concentration camp.[2][1]

After the war, she was liberated and returned to Paris where she worked for four years as a press aide to André Malraux, before becoming a journalist.[1] In 1953, she was sent to French Indochina as a war correspondent.[2][3] There she undertook parachute training and was dropped, in the opening hours of Operation Castor, into Dien Bien Province, in the north-west corner of Vietnam.[2][4] She survived the war and returned to Paris where she worked as a writer and journalist until her retirement.

She died 6th March 2011 at the age of 87.

Notes and sources

  1. ^ a b c Friang (1958), 12–24.
  2. ^ a b c Fall, 138.
  3. ^ Friang (1958), 25–27.
  4. ^ Simpson, 29.

Published works