René Hardy


René Hardy was a member of the French Resistance during World War II. Hardy was born in Mortrée, Orne. In spite of having rendered dedicated and valuable service as a member of the resistance group, combat, he was still suspected of being instrumental in the arrest of Jean Moulin, General Charles Delestraint and other resistants. Despite later being acquitted in 2 separate trials, those suspicions never went away.

Treason

In January 1943 Hardy was seduced by the 20 year-old Lydie Bastien, described by one journalist as a great "French beauty" whose true loyalty was to her German lover, Gestapo officer Harry Stengritt. Hardy was arrested on 7 June 1943 when he walked into a trap laid by Bastien. Bastien was a devotèe of the occult and the philosophy of Frederich Nietzsche, who'd taken Gestapo officer Stengritt as her lover and was paid for her work for the Gestapo in the form of gems which Stengritt had confiscated from French Jews before deporting them to Auschwitz. In turn, Stengritt worked for Klaus Barbie, the "Butcher of Lyon". Bastien recalled: "I was already working for the Germans and they told me how to find and get to know Hardy, who I met and seduced at their request". Hardy fell madly in love with her, and Bastien later mentioned: "He was soon obsessed with me. Very quickly he was telling me all his secrets and I had complete access to his secret files." Bastien loathed Hardy and only slept with him out of her loyalty to Strengritt and the gems he paid her with. On 7 June 1943, Hardy bought a train ticket and as Bastien recalled: "The fool even thought I was coming with him. I warned the Germans he was on his way. Then Barbie called me to Lyon where they had taken Hardy and I told him that he had no choice. He had to collaborate with Barbie or my parents and myself would be arrested as well."" Faced with the prospect of losing Bastien forever and unaware of her true loyalties or the fact that she secretly hated him, Hardy agreed to start working for Barbie.
When, in 1943, Gestapo officers under the orders of Klaus Barbie stormed the house in Caluire where the French Resistance leadership was secretly meeting, only Hardy was not put in handcuffs. As the seven other men were led away, Hardy successfully made a break for it. The incident seemed suspicious to Raymond Aubrac, who, based on the ease with which the SS had let him go, always remained convinced that Hardy had alerted the Gestapo of their meeting. "From all the Germans with their submachine guns, there were only a couple of scattered shots," Aubrac later stated.

After the war

After the war, he was tried twice for collaboration for a number of reasons but was found not guilty, despite committing perjury at the first trial. Shortly before his death, he was accused again by Barbie himself, but died before any new charges could be brought.
After his trials, Hardy become a novelist, having written the book Bitter Victory which was adapted for the cinema in a Franco-US co-production starring Richard Burton and directed by Nicholas Ray. Shorty before his death, a destitute, broken down Hardy dressed in pajamas and apparently living in somebody's attic was interviewed for the film by the film-maker Marcel Ophüls, where he denied having betrayed Moulin.