Holocaust survivors, French president bid Simone Veil farewell
Revered Jewish politician to be inducted into Paris’s Pantheon mausoleum alongside her husband and dozens of French greats

Holocaust survivors joined France’s president and European dignitaries Wednesday at a memorial ceremony for Simone Veil, who rose from the horrors of Nazi death camps to become president of the European Parliament and one of France’s most revered politicians.
Best known in France for spearheading the legalization of abortion, Veil faced down sexist criticism and repeatedly broke barriers for women in politics. She died last week at age 89.
During a national ceremony with military honors Wednesday at the Invalides monument, home to Napoleon’s tomb, President Emmanuel Macron announced Veil will be inducted into Paris’s Pantheon mausoleum, the final resting place of dozens of French greats.
She will be buried next to her late husband, Antoine Veil, whose remains will be moved to lie alongside her.
European flags around France were lowered to half-staff to honor the woman, whose experience at Auschwitz-Birkenau made her a firm believer in European unification.

Macron praised her as inspiring “respect and fascination.”
“She loved Europe, she always fought for it … because she knew in the heart of this European dream there were above all dreams of peace and freedom,” he said.
Veil lost her parents and brother in Nazi camps, and spoke frequently about the need to keep the memory of the Holocaust alive.
“She knew that memory is here so that the unthinkable does not happen again,” Macron said.

“Just as you leave us, Madam, please receive an immense thank you from the French people,” he concluded in front of the coffin, which was covered with a French flag, in the presence of hundreds of ordinary citizens and high-profile guests including former presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande.

Veil’s coffin was taken from the ceremony to the music of a song known in French as Le Chant des Marais, and in English as the Peat Bog Soldiers’ Song, which was written by political prisoners in a Nazi camp on German moorlands.
The song was sung by a French army chorus in memory of the imprisonment of Veil and her family at Auschwitz.
Veil will be the fourth woman to be honored at the Pantheon. She follows two women who fought with the French Resistance during World War II, Germaine Tillion and Genevieve de Gaulle-Anthonioz, and Nobel Prize-winning chemist Marie Curie.
The Times of Israel Community.