И еще немного (история спасения)
Elise Michaux, whose husband was taken to Germany as a prisoner of war, lived in the miners’ village of Ham-sur-Sambre, halfway between Namur/Namen and Charleroi, not far from her sister-in-law Germaine Doucet. When Herman and Sarolta Wieder from Anderlecht, Brussels, were looking for a hiding place for their sons in 1942, Elise Michaux took in eleven-year-old Arthur, while Germaine Doucet took in his thirteen-year-old brother André. When Herman Wieder was picked up and deported, his wife Sarolta fled to Elise Michaux, where she stayed until the end of the war. Elise, who had two brothers living with her who were both active in local resistance cells, took double risk by hiding mother and child Wiener. Indeed her brothers were arrested, and deported to Buchenwald, were they were murdered. Elise Michaux never demanded or received any compensation. After the war the Wieders and their rescuers remained friends for life.
On April 2, 1995, Yad Vashem recognized Elise Michaux-Larivière as Righteous Among the Nations.