A village ” calm “ Or “life is good”: the inhabitants of Lépanges-sur-Vologne, infamous for having been the home of Grégory Villemin, want to turn the page, 40 years after the murder of the little boy.
Dozens of curious people still come every year to this village of 850 inhabitants to visit the tomb of the “little Gregory”murdered at the age of 4.
Located high up, with a panoramic view of the Vologne valley, its hills and the white houses of the town, the Lépanges cemetery also adjoins the church and the town hall.
Near one of the entrances, the child’s name no longer appears on the tombstone. Everything about him disappeared when his parents, Christine and Jean-Marie Villemin, exhumed him and cremated his remains almost 20 years after his death, in 2004. They themselves live in the Paris region.
A notebook placed in the church bears witness to the passage of numerous visitors.
“Very moving place due to the cruel, tragic, unforgettable events! Little Gregory, how can we stay silent? » question “Marie of Finistère”in a message left in October 2023.
There are dozens of messages like this, written by travelers from all over France or even Belgium. These are “people of all ages, sometimes families”explains a local resident to AFP.
“These words are useless”plagues Danielle Didier, member of a collective which campaigns to change the image of Lépanges. In the notebook, “people should just talk about the church. Not from the case, not from Gregory, not from the cemetery”.
“Dispossessed” from their village
On a daily basis, “we don’t talk about it”assures a resident who is walking her son in a stroller and who does not wish to give her identity.
“We must let the water flow under the bridges”adds Adrien Michel, 37 years old, settled here three years ago for “tranquility” of the town. He has just dropped his daughter off at the village nursery school, among dozens of other children.
From now on, the village lives peacefully, and this dramatic day is far away, except when Vosges Matin, the local newspaper, publishes an article relating to the affair: “People read it and talk about it”said a trader.
Au “Bistro”the café-restaurant of Lépanges, a historian, a local press correspondent and a municipal councilor offer to discover “something else” of this village that they “like” and who is “more than the Grégory affair”as Cédric Prévot, the historian, says. Like its “17 businesses, 30 associations”, its “tranquility”…
The choice of location is not trivial: in October 1984 and during the months that followed, the people of Lépange were “dispossessed” from this restaurant, where the editorial staff had taken up residence.
At midday, dozens of workers have lunch there. At the station, the trains no longer stop, but buses transport residents to work in Epinal or Rambervillers.
The butcher, established for 20 years, has “fed up” to be questioned about the affair, and says he gives the same answer, a bit annoyed, to all the journalists who enter his business.
Turn the page
Certainly, “something terrible happened, a real tragedy, a trauma for the village, and our initiative is absolutely not to take a position against the Grégory affair, against his journalistic treatment, or against the victims”assures Cédric Prévot.
But for the inhabitants of Lépanges, morbid curiosity is unwelcome, especially since it was in Docelles, six kilometers away, that the child’s body was found.
Owner of a house in Docelles for around twenty years, Jean-Michel Boucaud says he has never “never heard anyone talk about the affair” in this village. “I heard they found the body here” with the Netflix series on the affair released in 2019, he says. “People were a little disgusted. They don’t want to hear about it anymore.”.
Docelles is, however, less mentioned, particularly in the media, than Lépanges, known as far away as Canada, according to a resident of a neighboring village.
The Liver, “there is not only the fortieth anniversary of the Grégory affair, there is also the centenary of two paintings present in the church, listed as heritage since 2008”explains Cédric Prévot.
As many “heritage or cultural wealth” that the collective wishes to highlight, far from “all fantasies” linked to the Grégory affair.