French writer Abel Hermant sentenced to life in prison for collaborating with the Nazis.
The writer arrived in court in an ambulance; his venerable age, recent surgery, and bronchitis meant he struggled to move unaided. He was to be cross-examined on his anti-Gaullist and anti-British propaganda articles published during the German occupation.
Hermant insisted that he was not a Nazi collaborator and that his pro-Nazi writings were a misunderstanding. He admitted to the judge that during Germany’s occupation of France he blindly followed Marshal Pétain, the leader of Vichy France.
The judge was unmoved but viewed Hermant's age as a mitigating circumstance and sentenced the 83-year-old collaborator to life imprisonment.
Hermant was a prominent figure in French literature. Author of more than 150 novels, 11 plays, numerous articles and essays, he also contributed to the French language dictionary. After the verdict, he was removed from the French Academy, his possessions confiscated, and he was stripped of his Commandeur of the Legion of Honour title.
In 1948, Hermant was given parole due to his rapidly deteriorating health and transferred to the Condé hospice in Chantilly, where he died on 28 September 1950.