Today, in our God and Suffering class we watched and discussed Weapons of the Spirit. This documentary by Pierre Sauvage tells, in a matter-of-fact way, the Nazi era story of 5000 Christians sheltering 5000 Jews in and around one village in occupied France.
The village, Le Chambon, was a small, isolated farming community in south-central France. Most of the villagers were Huguenots, the first Protestants in France. After the fall of France in June, 1940, the Germans occupied the northern half of the country and installed a puppet government in the south under Marshal Petain in Vichy. The Chambonnais were opposed to this collaboration. The day after the May 22 surrender, Andre Trocme, the pastor in Le Chambon, reminded the villagers that, “The responsibility of Christians is to resist the violence that will be brought to bear on their consciences through the weapons of the spirit.”
The first Jewish refugees began arriving soon after that. Many had fled earlier from Germany, Poland and other European countries to France and now were fleeing the Nazi occupation. The villagers took in the refugees without questions, without second thoughts. There was no plan, no discussions, no pondering. Their Christian faith made it natural to help others in need.
Pierre Sauvage’s parents found refuge in Le Chambon and he was born there on March 25, 1944. The film is a very personal search to understand how a whole community of independent, religious and simple people could simultaneously act without agonizing rather than agonizing without acting.
The film portrays what Christians are commanded to do for those in need and what good people can do given the right circumstances. It does not say that this is the whole solution and if everyone did this the holocaust would not be a part of history. Many families throughout Europe did the same thing on a smaller scale. We need to keep in mind that at times the force of hate can for at time overwhelm love.
This movie shows how for a time the force of love overcame hate. It gives much to reflect on.



