The group gathers around the book Le village de l'Allemand by Boualem Sansal.
Born to an Algerian mother and a German father, two brothers are raised by an elderly immigrant uncle in a Paris suburb. When, in 1994, they learn that their parents, who had stayed behind in the village of Aïn Deb, near Setif, have had their throats slit in a GIA massacre, their grief is compounded by a far more atrocious pain: the revelation of who their father was, this German who held the prestigious title of moudjahid... Based on an authentic story, the novel offers a vehement and profound reflection, nourished by the thought of Primo Levi.
