The document summarizes life in an internment camp in Guérande, France between 1914-1919. The camp originally served as a seminary but housed approximately 400 men, women, and children of various nationalities, including Germans, Hungarians, Austrians, Turks, and Bulgarians who were suspected of being spies or from countries fighting against France. While interned, the detainees had to help maintain the camp through work, but were not brutally treated or tortured. Men and women were housed separately.