Intelligent, ambitious and a rising star in the
French artillery, Captain Alfred Dreyfus appeared to
have everything: family, money, and the prospect of a
post on the General Staff. But his rapid rise had also
made him enemies - many of them aristocratic officers in
the army's High Command who resented him because he was
middle-class, meritocratic and a Jew. In October 1894,
the torn fragments of an unsigned memo containing
military secrets were retrieved by a cleaning lady from
the waste paper basket of Colonel Maximilien von
Schwartzkoppen of the German embassy in Paris. When
French intelligence pieced the document back together to
uncover proof of a spy in their midst, Captain Dreyfus,
on slender evidence, was charged with selling military
secrets to the Germans, found guilty of treason by
unanimous verdict and sentenced to life imprisonment on
the notorious Devil's Island. The fight to free the
wrongfully convicted Dreyfus - over twelve long years,
through many trials - is a story rife with heroes and
villains, courage and cowardice, dissimulation and
deceit.One of the most infamous miscarriages of justice
in history, the Dreyfus affair divided France, stunned
the world and unleashed violent hatreds and anti-Semitic
passions which offered a foretaste of what was to play
out in the long, bloody twentieth century to come.
Today, amid charged debates over national and religious
identity across the globe, its lessons throw into sharp
relief the conflicts of the present. In the hands of
historian, biographer and prize-winning novelist Piers
Paul Read, this masterful epic of the struggle between a
minority seeking justice and a military establishment
determined to save face comes dramatically alive for a
new generation. |
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