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Nazi hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld receive top French honours

AFP
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Nazi hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld receive top French honours
Serge and Beate Klarsfeld at the Reichtag in Berlin in 2009. Photo: DPA

France's most famous Nazi hunters, Serge Klarsfeld and his German wife Beate, received top honours in a ceremony led by French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.

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France's most famous Nazi hunters, Serge Klarsfeld and his German wife Beate, received top honours in a ceremony led by French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.

Serge Klarsfeld, 83, received the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour, 
France's highest award, while the 79-year-old Beate Klarsfeld received the 
National Order of Merit, having already been decorated with the Legion of 
Honour in 2014, with the rank of Grand Officer.

The Chief Rabbi of France Haim Korsia was among those who attended the ceremony at the Elysee Palace limited to family and close friends and 
associates.

Born September 17, 1935, in the Romanian capital Bucharest, Serge Klarsfeld escaped the Holocaust after his family moved to France but saw his father taken away to die in the  Auschwitz Nazi concentration camp.

He was naturalized in 1950, and 10 years later, while studying at the  prestigious Science-Po university in Paris, Klarsfled met Beate Kuenzel, the daughter of a former German soldier, on a metro platform.

The two, who married three years later, decided to bring fugitive Nazis to  justice, a mission they pursued for more than half a century.

In one of their most high-profile cases, the Klarsfelds found the notorious 
Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, a former Gestapo officer known as the "Butcher of Lyon" for his wartime torture of prisoners, who had escaped to South America. 

In 1971, the Klarsfelds revealed that Barbie was living in Bolivia, and in 
1983 he was extradited to France. Four years later he was convicted in a 
trial, and later died behind bars.

They also pursued members of France's collaborationist Vichy regime, 
including Rene Bouquet, Jean Leguay and Marice Papon -- despite obstruction from president Francois Mitterrand.

Mitterrand's successor Jacques Chirac finally recognized France's role in 
the deportations, a declaration Serge Klarsfeld said owed much to his and 
Beate's campaigning.

"Neither could have succeeded without the other," their daughter Lida once 
said.

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