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Tributes Paid To Occupation Hero Bob Le Sueur

Bob Le Sueur, who risked his life to help escaped Russian slave workers during World War Two, has died aged 102.

The Occupation hero was well-known by islanders for his selfless acts of bravery when Jersey was under Nazi rule.

Mr Le Sueur - in his early twenties when German soldiers had control of the island - sheltered and protected a number of prisoners of war.

He was made an MBE in 2013 for his lifesaving actions.

Mr Le Sueur was a regular attendee of annual commemorative events, including Liberation Day and Holocaust Memorial Day, and regularly shared his personal accounts of the Occupation.

His memoir ‘Growing Up Fast', compiled by journalist Chris Stone, was published in 2020.

That same year, as he turned 100, he told Jersey Heritage his Liberation story:

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He most recently made the news earlier this year, shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began.

At 101, he challenged himself to walk 100 steps a day of his garden to raise money for refugees fleeing the conflict.

He completed 5,000 steps in a little over a month.

Tributes to Mr Le Sueur have been pouring in since news of his death at the weekend.

Jersey’s Bailiff Sir Tim Le Cocq called him ‘one of the great Jersey men of his generation’.

“A man of real principle, he continued to champion the causes he believed in throughout his life.

It was a privilege to have met him, he is an example to us all and he will be long remembered.”

Chief Minister Deputy Kristina Moore said: ‘Every person fortunate to meet or know Bob Le Sueur knew what a humble yet great islander we had amongst us.’

 

External Relations Minister Deputy Philip Ozouf shared a photo of a plaque on York Street that bears an inscribed quote.

Jersey Heritage paid its own tribute:

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