Final Days of an Icon: Charles de Gaulle

2024 ж. 8 Сәу.
88 495 Рет қаралды

On November 9, 1970, one of the most emblematic and complex personalities on the French political scene died. A stroke had killed Charles de Gaulle at the Boisserie in Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises.
Directors: Philippe Caldéron and Christophe Weber

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  • I am extremely impressed with this offering. As an aged individual, I am so pleased to see on KZhead these presentations of the historical past which each new viewing generations SHOULD view!!! De Gaulle is an extremely important figure of the 20th century. How humbling to hear that he would have wished to meet Ho Chi Minh!!!! How I wish that our current generation of viewers could understand the significance of de Gaulle's meeting with de Valera in Ireland! This was wonderful, and I thank you for this significant historical offering to your viewers. WELL DONE!!!! My name is Peter & thank you for your efforts!!!!

    @user-id9fv6of6x@user-id9fv6of6x10 күн бұрын
    • Thankyou Peter for sharing your thoughts. De Gaulle still inspire people who wanted to live a life beyond ordinary and for something worthwhile.

      @princepeter9864@princepeter98648 күн бұрын
  • My admiration is for Charles de Gaulle, strange how admired after his passing, he was an patriot

    @landafluit7590@landafluit75902 күн бұрын
  • le seul président patriote de l'histoire de France 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷

    @indianajones5324@indianajones532417 күн бұрын
    • ΣΥΜΦΩΝΏ 👍 ΑΠΌΛΥΤΑ ΜΑΖΊ ΣΟΥ 👍👍🇨🇾🇨🇾

      @giorgosfylaktou2610@giorgosfylaktou261017 күн бұрын
    • Eikös tämä herra. Ollut maan paossa Toisen maailmansodan aikana Kun Saksa miehitti Ranskan ? Saksa marssi maahan (Se oli häpeä) Kukaan ei tehnyt mitään = Puollustanut maata Hän siis jätti Maansa vihollisen käsiin Kun olisi pitänyt jäädä Kansan tueksi ☹👎

      @user-ip3nh9pc1y@user-ip3nh9pc1y13 күн бұрын
  • A great general of France

    @MattCabalitan@MattCabalitan24 күн бұрын
  • Excelente documental

    @MultiGabrielchavez@MultiGabrielchavez2 күн бұрын
  • He defended, liberated and guided France, unlike any other.

    @mrpeel3239@mrpeel3239Күн бұрын
  • Thanks for uploading, when was this filmed?

    @duroccoenky@duroccoenky26 күн бұрын
    • This is a 2005 documentary

      @ahaszsaddssd9931@ahaszsaddssd993126 күн бұрын
  • De Gaulle foi um político que até hoje os franceses tem respeito coisa política que não existe hoje. Tem algo de muito especial nessa pessoa política que os políticos de hoje na França não aprenderam

    @edwaldocamargo4387@edwaldocamargo438722 күн бұрын
    • ΣΥΜΦΩΝΏ 👍 ΑΠΌΛΥΤΑ ΜΑΖΊ ΣΟΥ 🇨🇾🇨🇾👍👍

      @giorgosfylaktou2610@giorgosfylaktou261017 күн бұрын
  • I have seen him in Addis Abeba,while visiting Ethiopia.I felt I am part of it.

    @tedgebregzi3832@tedgebregzi38326 күн бұрын
  • Correction: Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt 1918-1970, was 52 when died suddenly NOT 59. 🤔

    @gloriag1888@gloriag188819 күн бұрын
  • Amar a França amar o povo francês amar era o segredo político desse grande francês. É assim que si faz um grande político

    @edwaldocamargo4387@edwaldocamargo438722 күн бұрын
  • Vraiment interessant.

    @julianmeek2156@julianmeek21566 күн бұрын
  • For some reason I loved de Gaulle

    @chicagomike@chicagomike15 күн бұрын
  • "The Italians only had to forget a defeat. The French had to create a victory, which is much more difficult." --Luigi Barzini.

    @DJS11811@DJS1181122 күн бұрын
  • Un gran hombre que hizo más grande a Francia, un verdadero estadista.

    @eduardobomben6521@eduardobomben652119 күн бұрын
    • También tenía sus defectos. Un hombre soberbio y terco, distanciado de los jóvenes de su país, con cierto resentimiento inexplicable hacia el Reino Unido y Estados Unidos pese al enorme apoyo y sacrificios que estos países prestaron a Francia en la Guerra. Las protestas del 1968 derivaron en parte del descontento popular con su Gobierno.

      @briandavid6879@briandavid687911 күн бұрын
    • @@briandavid6879 _" with a certain inexplicable resentment towards the United Kingdom and the United States"_ There was no resentment from his part. He simply didn't want France to be occupied again, this time by the US. The US that occupied West Germany and the rest of Western Europe, like Italy and the other small countries. De Gaulle saw that coming, when the US did its best to push him aside and supported Pierre Laval, a Nazi collaborator, for the presidency of France, . Note that Pierre Laval was prime minister in the government of Phillipe Petain who fully collaborated with Adolf Hitler, but the Americans wanted him instead of De Gaulle who simply refused to bow to Washington, in fact he told the US president, _"I am too poor to bow to you."_ Laval was tried and executed 6 months after the end of WWII. Also note, that the US and the UK were not keen that France obtains a permanent seat in the United Nations, but it was thanks to Joseph Stalin support that France obtained it. The US wanted France to be another European vassal, Charles de Gaull refused, the Washingtonians hated him and his guts. _"The 1968 protests derived in part from popular discontent with his government."_ It was a color revolution during the Hippie movement. The US did not like two things that Charles de Gaulle did. 1- He took France out of NATO. 2- He ordered the Bank of France to increase the amount of payments in gold that was stored in New Work Federal Reserve, later on, a French warship was sent to bring back the gold France had stored in the US, the French knew the coming plan of Richard Nixon about decoupling the US dollar from the gold standard. Charles de Gaulle never claimed that he is perfect, but he was nobody's fool, and the Washingtonians couldn't stand him for that.

      @brahim119@brahim1195 күн бұрын
    • JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJA

      @tintorvictor6595@tintorvictor65953 күн бұрын
  • Uno de los más grandes líderes de Francia y del mundo, Francia es lo que es gracias a la determinación, patriotismo y fe que tuvo en su patria, viva DeGaulle, viva Francia, gracias por esta entrega.

    @carlosenriquecrousillat2483@carlosenriquecrousillat248310 күн бұрын
  • في الحرب العالمية الثانية وقبل دخول القوات الألمانية باريس تمكن ديكول من الفرار إلى لندن وكان يقود المقاومة الفرنسية من لندن ويعطي تعليماته إلى الشباب الفرنسي على الصمود ويضربوا الألمان في كل مكان في فرنسا وكان هذا عبر الراديو مباشرةً

    @user-jm8yw9fu7w@user-jm8yw9fu7w26 күн бұрын
  • Minha escola no Brasil se chama Charles de Gaulle foi interessante saber da história deste homem

    @LeonardoPires-iu6gz@LeonardoPires-iu6gz11 күн бұрын
  • 🕊🤲

    @user-zk3wx7xh5h@user-zk3wx7xh5h24 күн бұрын
  • HE WAS AND HE WILL BE THE BEST AND NO.1 PRESIDENT OF FRANCE 🇫🇷. DESPITE 1968 PARIS AND FRANCE 🇫🇷 UPRISING. HE WAS ABOVE ALL THE LIBERATOR OF FRANCE 🇫🇷 IN 1944 AGAINST NAZIS. VIVE LE PRESIDENT ET GENERAL CHARLES DE GAULLE. 🇨🇾🇨🇾👍👍

    @giorgosfylaktou2610@giorgosfylaktou261017 күн бұрын
  • Valóban nagy volt!

    @katalingaspar7752@katalingaspar775218 сағат бұрын
  • Interessante documentario, anche se la traduzione italiana presenta vari errori

    @fabrys2000@fabrys200012 күн бұрын
  • Vive de Gaulle !

    @tomvousregarde2023@tomvousregarde202321 күн бұрын
  • Bloody hell! That was a bit grim.

    @davewhiteman8353@davewhiteman835316 күн бұрын
  • I want to visit France for the holidays this year. So much history there. Great episode thanks for sharing.

    @pedenmk@pedenmk12 күн бұрын
    • Also visiting(seeing)Paris must be very interesting

      @tedgebregzi3832@tedgebregzi38324 күн бұрын
  • Ojalá hubiese traducción al español.

    @hernanmanzanomunoz1116@hernanmanzanomunoz111622 күн бұрын
    • Auch ins Deutsche.

      @wernerbomer7544@wernerbomer754417 күн бұрын
    • Clic sur la roue crantée sous la vidéo, puis sur "sous titres" et chois ta langue.

      @Heimrik01@Heimrik0117 күн бұрын
  • The ceremony at Notre-Dame de Paris, was not decided nor wanted by Général de Gaulle, it's a decision taken by the government. As for the official funeral, they were decided long before by Général de Gaulle himself to be set in Colombey-les-Deux-Églises where is daughter was already in the cemetery. NEVER Général de Gaulle thought he would be called back. He was too clever for that. That a big flat lie.

    @jackchevalier8105@jackchevalier810517 күн бұрын
  • Junto com Churchill … grandes nomes que combateram o nazi fascismo🙏🙏🙏

    @ildafranco5687@ildafranco56877 күн бұрын
  • Los subtítulos en español son desastrosos.

    @joseluissanchezferrer1843@joseluissanchezferrer18434 күн бұрын
  • 👍👍

    @gunarimanurung2245@gunarimanurung224526 күн бұрын
  • 🔥

    @amer9208@amer920826 күн бұрын
  • The man burned all bridges when he left France for the UK. He left for France not as the very junior general he was but as an even more junior minister in the elected government. People who think De Gaulle was somehow a coward don’t know what they talk about and should be ashamed. The man was a politician for a couple of weeks and incarnated in his person the legitimate government of France. I recommend to read the excellent biography by Julian Jackson. Americans who disparage him for being a beggar for his country should look into their own history and remember there were more French troops at at Yorktown than colonial troops. Does this diminish the role of Washington or Franklin?

    @peterpluim7912@peterpluim791222 күн бұрын
    • He was uncharitable to England who gave him a home and protection in 1940

      @briandelaney9710@briandelaney971021 күн бұрын
    • @@briandelaney9710 Churchill begged him to come but tried to discard him once he was was not as malleable as expected and the USA and the British tried to replace him with Giraud. De Gaulle kept the British out of the EU and it is a good thing he did so. De Gaulle predicted the UK would fight the EU from the inside as history proved happened. It was the UK who forced the membership of the eastern EU countries and the veto power of a single state , and then left. On a side note: look up how the British treated the Poles who performed splendidly during the Battle of Britain. As Dowding said: “Had it not been for the magnificent work of the Polish squadrons and their unsurpassed gallantry, I hesitate to say that the outcome of battle would have been the same.” They were not even allowed to march in the victory parade. De Gaulle owned the British nothing except a collaboration that benefited both sides, like the Concorde.

      @peterpluim7912@peterpluim791220 күн бұрын
    • @@peterpluim7912 We didn't enthusiastically participate in the Holocaust though did we?

      @deanedge5988@deanedge598820 күн бұрын
    • @@deanedge5988 Do you really want to go there?

      @peterpluim7912@peterpluim791220 күн бұрын
    • @@peterpluim7912 Yes. the Velo d'Hiver really happened didnt it; and Ive read Jacksons pre-war history and am in fact an admirer of Le General.

      @deanedge5988@deanedge598820 күн бұрын
  • At time of European giants and look what we have today.

    @sonnyirish3678@sonnyirish36784 күн бұрын
  • A real patriot! Just shows, once again, what a jerk Macron is.

    @ivandegrisogono3334@ivandegrisogono333423 күн бұрын
  • De gaulle was a great leader of great french republic

    @antothomas8488@antothomas84886 күн бұрын
  • Un phrasé extraordinaire, en partie héritée de la troisième république, mais qui puisse bien plus loin dans l'ancien régime et qui a complètement disparu aujourd'hui.

    @Bibi111ism@Bibi111ism13 күн бұрын
  • ✊🇦🇲✨✨✨🇫🇷❤️

    @tigransuqiasyan4839@tigransuqiasyan483913 күн бұрын
  • En ymmärrä miksi Häntä ylistetään Jätti isänmaa Kun Saksan panssari oli kadun kulmissa ?

    @user-ip3nh9pc1y@user-ip3nh9pc1y13 күн бұрын
  • 34:36 Making a guess , i think the word used by De Gaulle about Franco might have been 'soporifique' instead of léthargique

    @djolivierastro@djolivierastro12 күн бұрын
  • He thought we saved his country but actually for a few years he saved ours may ge rest in peace

    @michaelburton5988@michaelburton598818 күн бұрын
  • Nothing without Britain.

    @tonylove4800@tonylove480020 күн бұрын
    • ΔΕΝ ΣΥΜΦΩΝΏ ΜΑΖΙ ΣΟΥ. ΖΗΤΩ Η ΓΑΛΛΙΑ.

      @giorgosfylaktou2610@giorgosfylaktou261017 күн бұрын
  • I now know what the 1418 war is. World war 1

    @johnkeller6063@johnkeller606313 күн бұрын
  • His nose is on display in a cabinet on the 10th floor of the tower

    @youarewhatyouare@youarewhatyouare3 күн бұрын
    • @youarewhatyouare: Very funny. You have talent. You should be in show business.

      @redblack8414@redblack84143 күн бұрын
  • He said "Non" twice to the UK. Brought down by "Non". Karma

    @bobacrey1068@bobacrey106822 күн бұрын
    • The UK has also been hoisted by its own petard, by saying Leave. Karma is like that.

      @ilokivi@ilokivi21 күн бұрын
  • Spent most of WW2 in London... Proper Legend...

    @vicripoll@vicripoll26 күн бұрын
    • He wanted all the glory for liberating France

      @markstephens1026@markstephens102626 күн бұрын
    • Exactly; and then came back a hero on an American jeep, as if he was the one to the liberate his country. The French rewrote history Down Petain Up de Gaulle.

      @capoislamort100@capoislamort10025 күн бұрын
    • He was one of the great statesmen of the twentieth century and played a very difficult hand superbly.

      @Hartley_Hare@Hartley_Hare19 күн бұрын
    • Pétain était une crevure exécrable qui a mérité sa condamnation à mort. Hélas il a été gracié par..... De Gaulle. ​@@capoislamort100

      @patrickessel3317@patrickessel331718 күн бұрын
    • Nope he moved across North Africa with the provisionary government in exile.

      @AuxaneST@AuxaneST10 күн бұрын
  • Ho Chi Minh Oli valtio mies Ei jättänyt Maataan Sodan aikana Vietnamissa on Sotinut Ranska, Englanti, Yhdysvallat. Kaikki nämä maat On saanut turpaansa (Taistelivat kuin akat😂)

    @user-ip3nh9pc1y@user-ip3nh9pc1y13 күн бұрын
  • Hips like a woman, head like a Pineapple.

    @JohnEdwardBerry@JohnEdwardBerry2 күн бұрын
  • Once, when asked for his opinion of Charles de Gaulle, Winston Churchill mused: “If I regard de Gaulle as a great man? He is selfish, he is arrogant, he believes he is the center of the world.

    @rogerlebaron@rogerlebaron26 күн бұрын
    • So? How is that supposed to be a problem? Many leaders across the world have a HUGE ego, many of them are arrogant, and many of them actually do believe to be the center of the world. As long as they do a good job and, most importantly, as long as they're not bloodthirsty tyrants like Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin or Mao. Roosevelt HATED De Gaulle. Churchill and Roosevelt had contempt for De Gaulle and perhaps it had something to do with the fact that they were like in some sort of exclusive club of English-speaking leaders and they were like ''get away little French''. I don't hate Churchill but he was equally an arrogant and easily self-satisfied gentleman (although he was pretty badass and sometimes funny). As for Roosevelt, I simply don't like that man, he hated almost everybody: he really didn't like France at all. He hated the Germans (which is understandable since they were the enemies during W.W.2 but it's not just that he hated the nazis because nazis, he hated the Germans BECAUSE Germans). He also hated the Japanese (which is also understandable because, during W.W.2, the U.S. was at war with Imperial Japan in the Pacific Ocean but Roosevelt didn't just hate the Japanese soldiers of the Imperial Army, they hated ALL the Japanese). He also hated the Russians not just ''because Soviets'' but ''BECAUSE RUSSIANS''.

      @sebastiaodavila9747@sebastiaodavila974725 күн бұрын
    • The similarities in the life’s of both men are strikingly.

      @peterpluim7912@peterpluim791222 күн бұрын
    • churchill the war criminal of the jews

      @user-kc6wf4ne8j@user-kc6wf4ne8j21 күн бұрын
    • Churchill is said to have whispered to a companion as both of them watched de Gaulle walk by: "There but for the grace of God goes God himself."

      @benedictdesilva6677@benedictdesilva667720 күн бұрын
    • @@benedictdesilva6677 Hé was a strange man. Very simple in his personal habits but when he represented France, nothing could be good enough. People tend to forget he was accepted by his fellow French as the leader of the Free French in London. He was not exactly a buffoon. :)

      @peterpluim7912@peterpluim791220 күн бұрын
  • 👍🇩🇪

    @Peter-le3ux@Peter-le3ux15 күн бұрын
  • Only if it wasn’t for his hated England, his ma belle france would not be around by now

    @Pincopalin2143@Pincopalin21432 күн бұрын
  • Just as he did in Ireland, he tried to stir the pot in Quebec by encouraging a free and independent Quebec during a speech. No wonder FDR, Eisenhower and Churchill despised him.

    @Mark-yy2py@Mark-yy2py18 күн бұрын
    • vive un Québec libre!

      @BerigVintrange@BerigVintrange14 күн бұрын
    • I remember that

      @johnkeller6063@johnkeller606313 күн бұрын
    • De Gaulle wasn't despised by FDR, Ike and Churchill. De Gaulle irritated them but they respected him.

      @TheMotz55@TheMotz5512 күн бұрын
    • @@TheMotz55 he nay have been respected as a leader, but he was considered an ingrate. He even irritated LBJ in 1966 when France withdrew from NATO.

      @Mark-yy2py@Mark-yy2py12 күн бұрын
    • @@BerigVintrange Bravo.

      @redblack8414@redblack84143 күн бұрын
  • The other half of France had quite a different take on this moment. Remember the satirical weekly Hara Kiri issuing a full front page titled "Tragic village dance in Colombey, 1 dead". This exceptional but irritating man deserved both the pathos AND the rotten tomatoes, I think.

    @michelbardiaux7144@michelbardiaux714425 күн бұрын
    • It is one of the French paradoxes, the more time passes, the more the political choices of General De Gaulle, sometimes taken against the dominant opinion in France, are validated by his former political opponents, some of whom had even attempted assassination at the time. -Former supporters of Marshal Pétain recognized the relevance of his decision in June 1940 to oppose the armistice with Germany and to continue the struggle alongside the English, which was not obvious at the time after the episode of Mers El Kebir on July 3, 1940. -Former supporters of the"French Algeria and colonization recognize the relevance of its decision to decolonize in order to rid France of the economic burden represented by its colonies that encumbered its economic growth and prevent the majority Muslim population in Africa especially in Algeria does not become a majority in France because for De Gaulle maintaining French Algeria would have forced France to grant the right to vote to all Muslims in Algeria and not to a minority as at the time , so that with the Algerian Muslim demography, the Muslim population would have become the majority in France. Algerian independence prevented this. Its decision to endow France with atomic weapons and to bet on nuclear power plants to ensure the energy independence of France in case of crisis or conflict is today recognized as the most relevant notably with the Ukrainian Russian conflict with a Germany who abandoned nuclear power and became dependent on Russian gas. France is the 3rd country in number of nuclear warheads with the 2nd world maritime domain so that its nuclear submarines wanted by De Gaulle can have bases all over the world and that the French nuclear fire is able to destroy the USA and Russia because for De Gaulle it is not necessary to destroy his enemy several times when only one time is enough. For De Gaulle, the USA are not friends but allies of circumstance that can become hostile to France as Roosevelt showed, hence the need for France not to depend for its defence on the American nuclear shield and NATO but to have its own independent nuclear force, hence De Gaulle’s decision in 1966 to have France leave the integrated NATO commanderMoreover the decision to activate the French nuclear force belongs to the only president of the French republic and does not need the endorsement of the Americans, unlike the British nuclear force which was equipped with the nuclear weapon by the Americans , unlike France, which the Americans described as a rogue state under De Gaulle for having acquired the atomic bomb without their approval and without its use depending on the Americans.Paradoxically, De Gaulle, in the midst of the Cold War, would come closer in the 1960s to the USSR before renewing the traditional alliance of France with Russia advocated by Napoleon’s Foreign Minister, Talleyrand, which he deplored in 1935, the abandonment by France because of the pressures of the British anti-communist leaders and allowed Germany in 1940 unlike 1914 to launch its entire army on France without fear of being attacked in the east by the Russians. According to De Gaulle, the alliance with Russia allows France to "oppose Germany and the Anglo-Americans. De Gaulle is a pragmatist and not an ideologist and never spoke of the USSR but of Russia because according to him the Soviets are Russians before being communists and geopolitics is stronger than ideology.According to the formula of De Gaulle, "Russia will absorb communism as the blotter absorbs water". The fall of the communist regime of the USSR in 1991 will prove him right because Russia is still present and Gaullist President Chirac in 2003 will try to reactivate the alliance with Russia to oppose the American invasion of Iraq. -The constitution of the 5th Republic and De Gaulle’s decision to have the President of the Republic elected directly by direct universal suffrage by the French people is now unanimously accepted by all the French and almost all the political class, Even by De Gaulle’s political opponents, such as the socialist Mitterrand who came to power in 1981, will not touch the constitution of the 5th republic, which he had constantly criticized when he was in opposition. The constitution over time to demonstrate its flexibility to cohabit a president and a government of opposite political tendencies and the elected president to continue to govern despite the absence of a parliamentary majority as is currently the case, so that the constitution of the 5th Republic of 1958 after 66 years of existence is the French political regime is now the most stable since the French Revolution of 1789 before the 65 years of the 3rd Republic (1875-1940)

      @domitiusafer@domitiusafer23 күн бұрын
  • A 50% un génie, à 50% un imposteur.

    @abbevogler2619@abbevogler261921 күн бұрын
  • In ww2 Charles de Gaules : We were invaded by the Germans😢 After ww2 Charles de Gaules : let us keep colonial Indochina😅

    @JohannPachelbel81@JohannPachelbel8119 күн бұрын
  • An icon usually means someone you've heard of.

    @cedricjoshuapayne@cedricjoshuapayne26 күн бұрын
    • So you have never heard of degaule?

      @patrickwatrin5093@patrickwatrin509326 күн бұрын
    • @@patrickwatrin5093 No. Should I have?

      @cedricjoshuapayne@cedricjoshuapayne26 күн бұрын
    • @@cedricjoshuapayne no not necessarily, but if you are up on things then yeah obviously.but if you just a average dunderhead I would say no

      @patrickwatrin5093@patrickwatrin509326 күн бұрын
    • I don't know from which country you are but in France, De Gaulle is a HUGE figure. Even in the political and cultural landscape of modern-day France, De Gaulle remains a reference and it is very frowned upon in French society to lack respect for the General. De Gaulle is among the big names of those who fought against Nazi Germany. He is a bit like the French equivalent of Winston Churchill (in fact the two men met several times in London). Oh and, he was President of France in the 60's.

      @sebastiaodavila9747@sebastiaodavila974726 күн бұрын
    • Does "The Day of the Jackal" ring a bell?

      @michaelcorkery3853@michaelcorkery385326 күн бұрын
  • Con respeto a los ciudadanos franceses. No me agradó el desempeño histórico del general y político Charles De Gaulle.

    @hernanmanzanomunoz1116@hernanmanzanomunoz111622 күн бұрын
    • A quién le importa...a le agrado a mucha gente, incluso fuera de Francia.

      @Balrog2005@Balrog200522 күн бұрын
  • A legend in his own mind.

    @georgesouthwick7000@georgesouthwick700020 күн бұрын
    • A great man.

      @JohnAsmith-rw6uo@JohnAsmith-rw6uo20 күн бұрын
    • A legend. Period.

      @AuxaneST@AuxaneST10 күн бұрын
  • The British, commonwealth and USA led you to liberation not a General who gave up to the Third Reich within 2weeks and ran off to Britain to save his own skin.

    @paulwillard9687@paulwillard968717 күн бұрын
  • the english commentary is a lie.

    @billiecrouse8002@billiecrouse800218 күн бұрын
  • Today on a LADY GAGA! et merde!!!

    26 күн бұрын
  • Hero Really? How So? Because he said so?

    @carlnash7200@carlnash720026 күн бұрын
    • The immense majority of the french people, including his former opponents, admit de Gaulle was the main political man of the 20th century.

      @iparipaitegianiparipaitegi4643@iparipaitegianiparipaitegi464322 күн бұрын
  • He had the gaulle to Stand up to the british and out churchill the jarrow march hater right in his place well done charlie for having the gaulle

    @youarewhatyouare@youarewhatyouare3 күн бұрын
  • Just another " leader " who deserted his country during a war.

    @davewatson2124@davewatson21242 күн бұрын
  • I too after I eat a large lunch like to take a nap. Lol 🤣

    @johnkeller6063@johnkeller606313 күн бұрын
  • He hated the English

    @MarjorieStoker-oj8fh@MarjorieStoker-oj8fh7 күн бұрын
  • 1st 🥇

    @TechnoViking__@TechnoViking__26 күн бұрын
  • Une catastrophe

    @danton1333@danton133320 күн бұрын
  • De Gaul Fled. And the French lay down like 🐑 Sheep. God Bless Eisenhower. Savior of France 🇫🇷

    @tomjones5650@tomjones565018 күн бұрын
  • the war of 1418? 😂

    @florinelenaradamilea@florinelenaradamilea19 күн бұрын
  • Icon ❌ Criminal ✅

    @algeriandonna5031@algeriandonna503126 күн бұрын
    • No, my dear Algerian girl: the ❛❛F.N.L.❜❜ (« le Front National de Libération ») was a bunch of thugs and THEY were the true criminals who killed innocent people, both on the French and Algerian side. They even tried to assassinate De Gaulle but fortunately he survived. General De Gaulle could have crushed the ❛❛F.N.L.❜❜ like insects but he was still kind enough and he gave independence to your country (I deduce that you're Algerian given your nickname). Learn this: France has exhausted and ruined itself for the maintenance of its colonies and for Algeria in particular. France has built schools, hospitals, roads, buildings and various infrastructures in Algeria. France brought Western medicine which saved countless lives and thanks to that the demography of your country grew. France basically created Algeria: the Algerian State as it exists today wouldn't even exist without France. You're just blinded by hate. Like many Algerians, you indefinitely cultivate your visceral hatred of France because it is the only way to give meaning to your existence and legitimize your frustrations. Besides, if France is such an oppressive country, why do so many Algerians want to live in France?

      @sebastiaodavila9747@sebastiaodavila974726 күн бұрын
  • While he ran and hid in england other frenchmen fought against bolshevism. I have no respect for this man.

    @GraemeWight-wx3xz@GraemeWight-wx3xz26 күн бұрын
    • Ты там пьяный что ли? Какой еще большевизм? Ты теории не знаешь, иди в школу)

      @ampersand8@ampersand826 күн бұрын
    • When did this happen?

      @abrahamdominguez5517@abrahamdominguez551722 күн бұрын
    • Petain your man, I hear.

      @tonylove4800@tonylove480020 күн бұрын
    • @@tonylove4800 : who ?

      @GraemeWight-wx3xz@GraemeWight-wx3xz19 күн бұрын
    • Maybe you should learn history instead of vomiting your nonsense.

      @TheRightONe-et3gh@TheRightONe-et3gh10 күн бұрын
  • Les derniers jours d'un criminel vouliez vous dire...

    @ericsimo4340@ericsimo434022 күн бұрын
    • JUIF peut être ?

      @Philippe198@Philippe19820 күн бұрын
    • @@Philippe198 ils ne l'aimaient pas il ne les laissait pas voler à leur grès.

      @TheRightONe-et3gh@TheRightONe-et3gh10 күн бұрын
  • в чем он икона? примазался к нашей Победе, африканцев притесняли...

    @Dmitry_Gennadyevich@Dmitry_Gennadyevich25 күн бұрын
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