Charles Lescat: Difference between revisions
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After the [[Liberation of Paris]], he took refuge in Germany before travelling to [[Francoist Spain]]. He arrived in Uruguay in 1946, and later established himself in [[Juan Peron]]'s Argentina. There, he organized one of the [[ratlines (history)|ratlines]] used by collaborators and Nazi fugitives. Lescat helped [[Pierre Daye]] find refuge in Argentina. |
After the [[Liberation of Paris]], he took refuge in Germany before travelling to [[Francoist Spain]]. He arrived in Uruguay in 1946, and later established himself in [[Juan Peron]]'s Argentina. There, he organized one of the [[ratlines (history)|ratlines]] used by collaborators and Nazi fugitives. Lescat helped [[Pierre Daye]] find refuge in Argentina. |
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Lescat was sentenced to death ''in absentia'' in May 1947 by the [[Court of Cassation (France)|High Court]] in Paris, but, despite [[extradition]] requests from France, was never extradited. He died in Argentina in 1948. |
Lescat was sentenced to death ''in absentia'' in May 1947 by the [[Court of Cassation (France)|High Court]] in Paris, but, despite [[extradition]] requests from France, Lescat was never extradited. He died in Argentina in 1948. |
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==Sources== |
==Sources== |
Revision as of 00:03, 13 May 2020
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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. (August 2017) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Charles Lescat (19 February 1887 – 1948) was an Argentine citizen, who studied in France and wrote in Je suis partout, the ultra-Collaborationist journal headed by Robert Brasillach.
Born as Carlos Hipólito Saralegui Lesca in Buenos Aires, he was a volunteer [clarification needed] during World War I in France. There, Lescat became a personal friend of Charles Maurras, leader of the Action française (AF) monarchist movement. Part of the AF, he presided over the administration council of Je suis partout, and was editor in chief of this review for a time. In 1941 he published an anti-Semitic book titled Quand Israël se venge (When Israel takes revenge), through the Éditions Grasset publishing house.
After the Liberation of Paris, he took refuge in Germany before travelling to Francoist Spain. He arrived in Uruguay in 1946, and later established himself in Juan Peron's Argentina. There, he organized one of the ratlines used by collaborators and Nazi fugitives. Lescat helped Pierre Daye find refuge in Argentina.
Lescat was sentenced to death in absentia in May 1947 by the High Court in Paris, but, despite extradition requests from France, Lescat was never extradited. He died in Argentina in 1948.
Sources
- Charles Lescat - extradiciones (in Spanish)
- 1887 births
- 1948 deaths
- People from Buenos Aires
- Argentine collaborators with Nazi Germany
- Nazis in South America
- Holocaust perpetrators in France
- Argentine people of French descent
- People sentenced to death in absentia
- Argentine people of Basque descent
- Argentina in World War I
- World War II biography stubs
- Argentine people stubs