
Feminist icon Gisele Pelicot awarded France's top civic honour: Report
Pelicot, 72, was named knight of the Legion of Honour on a list announced before France's July 14 national day, the AFP news agency reported on Sunday.
She was among 589 people named for the honour, which recognises merit-based national service.
Pelicot refused to remain anonymous and publicly testified at a trial in 2024 against her former husband, Dominique Pelicot, who drugged her and arranged for her to be raped by dozens of men over a decade.
His co-conspirators tried to claim they were unaware that the acts were not consensual and blamed the husband.
Gisele Pelicot at the time called it a 'trial of cowardice' and asserted there was no excuse for abusing her when she was unconscious. Her testimony gripped the world and led to Dominique Pelicot and 50 co-defendants being found guilty in the mass-rape case.
Lauded for her courage in exposing the case, which forced a change in France's rape law, she has since been named among the world's most influential people in international lists.
Gisele Pelicot has not spoken further since the trial. She is focusing on writing a book, scheduled for release in 2026, that delves into her perspective of the ordeal, according to her lawyer.
Writers, artists and international figures are also on the Legion of Honour list.
Singer, music producer and clothing designer Pharrell Williams, writer Marc Levy, actor Lea Drucker, singer Sylvie Vartan, and Holocaust survivor and educator Yvette Levy are some of the other recipients.
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