Péju [fr] and Jean-JacquesSoudeille [fr] of the Radical Party. The movement gained traction when the leadership was assumed in spring 1941 by Jean-Pierre Lévy
Avinin, Noël Clavier [fr], Auguste Pinton [fr], Élie Péju [fr] and Jean-JacquesSoudeille [fr]. Lévy became the movement's leader and organised it into sections
economist Lucien Laurat and two future leaders of the French Resistance Jean-JacquesSoudeille and Pierre Kaan, the philosopher Simone Weil was invited to join
Auguste Pinton [fr], former city councillor, Élie Péju [fr], and Jean-JacquesSoudeille [fr], former communists turned radicals. They and a few others got
Péju, Auguste Pinton and Jean-JacquesSoudeille. In 1941, they created the Franc-Tireur movement from France-Liberté with Jean-Pierre Lévy from Strasbourg