Lazare Ponticelli | |
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Lazare Ponticelli in 2006 |
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Born | 24 December 1897 Groppo Ducale, a frazione in Bettola, Piacenza, Italy |
Died | March 12, 2008 (aged 110 years, 79 days) Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France |
Allegiance | France (1914–1915) Italy (1915–1918) |
Service/branch | French Army Italian Army |
Years of service | August 1914 – November 1918 |
Battles/wars | World War I |
Awards | Croix de guerre Médaille Interalliée Légion d'honneur Ordine di Vittorio Veneto[1] |
Other work | Piping and metal work |
Lazare Ponticelli (24 December 1897, later transcribed as 7 December — 12 March 2008), Knight of Vittorio Veneto, was at 110, the last surviving officially recognized veteran of the First World War from France and the last poilu of its trenches to die. [b] Born in Italy, he travelled on his own to France at the age of eight. Aged 16, he lied about his age in order to join the French Army at the start of the war in 1914, before being transferred against his will to the Italian Army the following year. After the war, he and his brothers founded the piping and metal work company Ponticelli Frères (Ponticelli Brothers), which produced supplies for the Second World War effort and as of 2009 was still in business.
Ponticelli was the oldest living man of Italian birth and the oldest man living in France at the time of his death. Every Armistice Day until 2007 he attended ceremonies honoring deceased veterans. In his later years, he criticized war, and stored his awards from the First World War in a shoe box. While he felt unworthy of the state funeral the French government offered him, he eventually accepted one. However, he asked for the emphasis of the procession to be on the common soldiers who died on the battlefield. French president Nicolas Sarkozy honored his wish and dedicated a plaque to them at the procession.
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Born as Lazzaro Ponticelli in Groppo Ducale, a civil parish in the town of Bettola, Piacenza province, in northern Italy,[2] he was raised in the mountain village of I Cordani, one of seven children born to Jean and Philomène Ponticelli. His father sold livestock on the fairgrounds and occasionally worked as a carpenter and cobbler.[3] His mother cultivated the family's small plot of land and, like many women of the area, commuted three times a year to the Po Valley to work in its rice fields.[2] Despite the Ponticelli family's hard work, they were impoverished and the children often went to bed on an empty stomach.[4] When Lazare was two years of age, his mother moved to France to earn a better living. After the unexpected deaths of Jean Ponticelli and his eldest son, Pierre, the rest of the family moved to Paris, leaving Lazare in the care of neighbors.[3]
At age six, Ponticelli started several jobs, including making clogs.[5] By 1906 Lazzaro had saved enough money to buy a railway ticket to Paris, which he considered "paradise."[2][3][5] To travel to the capital of France, he walked 21 miles (34 km) to the nearest train station at Piacenza.[6] He could not speak French, though he found work as a chimney sweep in Nogent-sur-Marne and later as a paper boy in Paris.[2][7][8] He obtained a work permit at age 13.[3]
In August 1914, shortly after the outbreak of World War I, Ponticelli joined the 1st Régiment de Marche of the French Foreign Legion at 16 years old, lying about his age to do so. There he rediscovered his older brother, Céleste Ponticelli, who had also joined the regiment.[2][7] According to Ponticelli, France had done much for him, and serving was his way of showing his gratitude.[3] He served at Soissons in Picardy, northeast France, and at Douaumont, near Verdun.[9] Ponticelli worked at digging burial pits and trenches.[10] In keeping a promise to Céleste to always assist others, he rescued a German and a French soldier who were wounded in the arm and leg, respectively.[11]
Ponticelli was not a French citizen and in May 1915, when Italy entered the war, he was conscripted into the Italian Army. Although he attempted to remain with his French regiment, he eventually enlisted in the 3rd Alpini Regiment, after being escorted to Turin by two gendarmes.[3] Ponticelli saw service against the Austro-Hungarian Army at Mount Piccolo on the Austria–Italy border.[11] At his new post as a machine gunner, Ponticelli was seriously wounded by a shell during an assault on an Austrian mountain position. He was returned to his post after rest and recuperation in Naples.[2] In an undated interview, he described being injured: "Blood was running into my eyes... I continued firing despite my wound."[8]
Once, his regiment ceased fighting the Austrians for three weeks. The armies, who mostly spoke each other's tongue, swapped loaves of bread for tobacco and photographed each other.[12] In 1918 Ponticelli was gassed in an Austrian attack that killed hundreds of his fellow soldiers.[2] Reflecting on war, he said: "You shoot at men who are fathers. War is completely stupid."[1][12] In one of his last interviews, Ponticelli stated he was amazed at his own survival.[13]
After being demobilized in 1920, Ponticelli founded a metal work company with Céleste and Bonfils, his youngest brother, which they called "Ponticelli Frères" ("Ponticelli Brothers").[3] Located in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, it became profitable and well-known in its field.[2] It was incorporated as a private limited company in 1932, when its primary work was with industrial chimneys.[14] During the Second World War, Ponticelli, who became a French citizen in 1939, was too old for combat but supported the war effort by supplying soldiers with his products.[2][3] He moved his factory into an unoccupied zone when Germany invaded and occupied France. After Vichy France was taken over by the Germans, he returned northwards and began working with the resistance.[2] In the aftermath of World War II, Ponticelli added a piping department to his company.[14] He continued managing the company until his retirement in 1960.[2] At the time of his death it was reported that the company had 4,000 employees[1] and its annual revenue (2005) was €300 million. The company now operates in several countries outside France, such as Angola.[15]
Until his death, Ponticelli lived with his daughter in the Paris suburb of Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, and every 11 November until 2007 he attended Armistice Day ceremonies.[2][7] An honored citizen of his adopted town, Ponticelli voted in the 2007 presidential and legislative elections.[3] He officially became a supercentenarian on 7 December 2007, celebrating his official 110th birthday at the National History of Immigration Museum.[16] He kept his war medals in a shoebox.[1]
When originally offered a state funeral by then French President Jacques Chirac, Ponticelli asserted that he did not want one, although the death of the penultimate recognized soldier,[b] Louis de Cazenave, on 20 January 2008[17] caused him to reconsider.[8] He eventually accepted a small ceremony "in the name of all those who died, men and women,"[8] during World War I.[7]
Today, I express the nation's deep emotion and infinite sadness. I salute the Italian boy who came to Paris to earn his living and chose to become French, first in August 1914 when he lied about his age to sign up at 16 for the French Foreign Legion to defend his adopted homeland. Then a second time in 1921, when he decided to remain here for good.
Ponticelli died at 12:45 PM (11:45 GMT) at his home in Le Kremlin-Bicêtre on 12 March 2008, aged 110.[10] At the time of his death, Ponticelli was the oldest living man of Italian birth and the oldest man living in France.[18] Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, released a statement and said there would be a day of national remembrance for the war dead of France.[7] Ponticelli was survived by at least one child, his then-78-year-old daughter, Janine Desbaucheron.[1][3]
His state funeral was held on 17 March 2008. The mass was held at Saint-Louis Cathedral in Les Invalides and was attended by government ministers, soldiers and members of Ponticelli's family.[19] French academic Max Gallo delivered the eulogy.[20] At the mass, French collégien Guillaume Kaleff read a poem written by his class in Ponticelli's honor.[21] Flags were ordered to be flown at half mast while Sarkozy unveiled a plaque dedicated to the veterans of World War I.[13] The French Foreign Legion, the same regiment that Ponticelli fought in, carried his coffin at the funeral.[19] After the procession, he was buried in his family's plot at the Ivry-sur-Seine cemetery, located in the Val-de-Marne.[22] On 11 November 2008, during the first Armistice Day since his death, Rue de Verdun in Le Kremlin-Bicêtre was renamed Rue de Verdun-Lazare-Ponticelli.[23]