It was revived in 1915 as an underground newspaper, produced illegally without German censorship, under the name La Libre Belgique (literally, The Free Belgium).
[2] Other editions included: The most important La Libre Belgique, however, was founded in Brussels by two lawyers, Paul Struye and Robert Logelain in August 1940.
It is generally known as La Libre Belgique de Peter Pan after the fictional name of the editor given on the paper's masthead.
[2] It was produced by supporters of the centre-right Catholic Party and many of the people involved in its production came from legal and financial circles within Brussels.
[2] In total, 85 issues of La Libre Belgique de Peter Pan were produced during the occupation, with the circulation of between 10,000 and 30,000 copies.