The Spy Who - The Spy Who Wouldn't Lie | The Unsung Heroines Of WW2 | 5
Episode Date: May 27, 2024The endeavors of the women of the Special Operatives Executive were vital to many of Britain's successes during WW2. But the secretive nature of their work meant that many of their heroic fea...ts have been lost to time.Anita Anand discusses how exactly they waged a secret war for freedom, with Rick Stroud, author of Lonely Courage: The true story of the SOE Heroines who fought to free Nazi occupied France.Listen to The Spy Who ad-free on Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/the-spy-who now. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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From Wondery, I'm Anita been fascinated by the stories that slip through the
cracks, you know, those elusive ones. And I adore the stories of women who, until you reach back in
history and pull them out, people haven't heard of. You know, the lives of great men are routinely
picked and poured over, sometimes, frankly, to the point of exhaustion.
But just because a story is less familiar to us,
it really doesn't mean it had any less of an impact on our present-day reality.
Noor's story is one such example.
This is a tale of courage and sacrifice.
Now, as we've learned in the preceding four episodes,
Noor was raised a Sufi. She grew up in a largely pacifist household. She was artistic. She was creative. She was someone who held honesty as the highest virtue. Really, she is the last person you
might have expected to become a spy. Yet, in some ways, her decision to become a Special Operations Executive, an SOE,
wasn't quite as unusual as it first seems.
At the time Noor joined the war effort,
thousands of women were signing up to play their part
in one of Europe's most deadly conflicts.
It was a decision motivated by necessity as much as by patriotism. And even
though women like Noor were willing to put their lives on the line, they still couldn't escape the
prejudice facing women in the 1940s. What's really extraordinary to me is that these women,
they were part of a society which had only deemed women recently worthy of getting the vote at all. You know, until
1928, women weren't special enough, clever enough, capable enough of deciding what the future should
look like. And yet here you have Noor and other women like her who want a hand in shaping the
future. And they are willing to put everything,
their very lives on the line to do that.
And I find that extraordinary.
With me today to discuss the work of the SOE operatives like Noor
is Rick Stroud, author of Lonely Courage,
the true story of the SOE heroines
who fought to free Nazi-occupied France.
Rick, it's so wonderful to have you here,
because I can't think of anyone better to take us through what is actually quite shadowy terrain at the end of the day.
Thank you. I'm very, very pleased to be here.
Let's start with the woman who's the beating heart of this story
and the reason we've come together, Noor Anayat Khan. I mean, how special is she in the history of not
just this country, but in the history of espionage and bravery? She's very, very special indeed in
the history of espionage and of bravery. And I'll say something right here at the beginning,
which I would normally say saved the ending, but the real reason that she's special is that she set a very, very high moral bar for
us all to live up to.
And as you, I think everybody listening already knows, she was a very gentle woman.
She was the daughter of a Sufi who used to sing her awake in the mornings.
She wanted to write children's books.
And she was, when the war
broke out, she joined the Royal Air Force and was trained as a radio operator. But on
the last, after she'd been captured, the man who was sort of in charge of her, the officer
who was in charge of her was told, give the Creole the works. And he said, and we know
that he said this because he was debriefed after the war before
he was hanged. He said, by the time I'd finished with her, she was a bloody mess. And as the dawn
broke in that terrible, dark prison cell, he pulled out his Luger to shoot her in the head.
And before he did that, she looked at him and she said, Liberté. And she could never have thought that her words would go
beyond the stone walls of that prison.
And so what this gentlewoman had done was to show us
that however weak you and I feel,
what we do matters and has given us something
that we have to live up to because she lived up to it
and all the women of the Special Operations Executive
and lots of men and women all over the world
gave their lives for that thing, for liberté.
And so I think that Noor epitomizes that.
She is the sort of essence of the bravery of ordinary people.
So get this, the Ontario Liberals elected Bonnie Crombie as their new leader.
Bonnie who?
I just sent you a profile.
Her first act as leader,
asking donors for a million bucks
for her salary.
That's excessive.
She's a big carbon tax supporter.
Oh, yeah.
Check out her record as mayor.
Oh, get out of here.
She even increased taxes
in this economy.
Yeah, higher taxes,
carbon taxes.
She sounds expensive.
Bonnie Crombie and the Ontario Liberals.
They just don't get it. That'll cost you.
A message from the Ontario PC Party.
Let's take a step back, though, and talk about the SOE itself.
Created in 1940, whose idea was it?
What was the thought process that went into the foundation of the SOE,
and how many people knew about it at the time?
The thought process really began with Winston Churchill,
who loved anything to do with spies, special operations,
and I think he was basically a sort of boy's own
paper guy. And he famously said, set Europe alight. And he commanded men to start an organization
which was secret, and which was going to be called the Special Operations Executive. Of course,
what an exciting name that is on its own. And that worked okay. And they were
recruiting from all walks of life. They had varsity men, bankers, stockbrokers, lawyers,
academics, Trotskyites, members of the Sinn Fein, Stalinists, anarchist burglars, robbers, pimps.
They even had a fashion artist, a guy called Brian Stonehouse, anybody who was prepared to fling themselves into the fight secretly,
who could exist in the field secretly,
and work against the Nazis in my speciality,
in the F section, which was the section that looked after France.
And then one day, quite soon after the SOE had been started,
there was a guy called Selwyn Jepson who said,
I think that women would be very, very good at this job.
And I think that we should recruit them.
And they said, oh, Selwyn, don't be so stupid.
I mean, women are lovely, but they should be at home doing the typing.
I mean, they're far too fragrant to be doing this kind of thing.
They're too fragrant.
Oh, for God's sake.
Anyway, Selwyn went on and on and on.
Eventually, he found himself in front of Churchill. And he said, Prime Minister, I think that women have a cool and lonely courage that makes them better at this job. They're patient and they're good at working on their own. And Churchill looked at him and said, very well, carry on, good luck. And that was it. And then he began to scour the country to find
French-speaking women. You must remember that it's all very well speaking French to a very high level,
but spy-level French is a different thing altogether. And you're moving into an environment
which is out to get you, that if secret policemen see you pour a drink in the wrong way or see your
dress has got some buttons on it that don't look quite right,
they'll go, there's something wrong with her.
Well, I mean, I'm sort of minded
of that scene in The Great Escape
where it is just one moment of relief.
You know, good luck.
Thank you.
You are forever on edge.
And just before we get in
through the doors of the Edo,
I have always been tantalized
by how they went about
tapping people on the shoulder.
So, you know, if you were a Francophile or you did fit the bill, or whether you were even a
pimp, gangster, accountant, or whoever, you know, the men were,
how were they identified as people who might be up to muster?
I think it was word, I mean, we don't know exactly how. I mean, they obviously couldn't
put an advertisement in the paper saying SOE, insurance watches. But I think once you've got one person, they'll go,
why don't you try old Bill? He's a very good, he taught me French at Oxford.
And I think the word just got around that if you were good at French
and good at handling yourself, you'd be recruited.
And I think that that was the unofficial way that it happened.
So I can understand how that works in a boys' club.
But when you have suddenly turned your beam onto women, and famously, you know, the spheres of men and women's worlds
in the 1940s did not overlap in a way in which they always appreciated the talents and abilities
of women. They would have had to do a lot more work to identify the right women for the job.
They would have had to do a lot more work. They would have been helped in this, I think, initially by a woman called Virginia Hall, who was an American diplomat who'd lost a leg.
Oh, she's an incredible character. Tell us more about her. I love Virginia.
Well, the short notes on Virginia is that she lost a leg and the American diplomatic service
said, well, as you've lost a leg, you're no good to us. And you can be a secretary. And she wouldn't have this. And she went to London, she made contact with the SOE.
I don't know quite how she did that. But she had some fairly high level contacts because she was
a diplomat. She barged her way in, which is a sort of characteristic that you would need.
They trained her. And when they were training her, she was dressed as a man, I mean, in overalls.
And there were people there who couldn't work out,
is this a man or a woman, and they didn't dare ask her.
But one time they were being trained to slash people's throats,
and she, with wooden knives, and to show how good she was,
she smeared lipstick on her knife,
slashed, you know, the false opponent's throat,
and then had red from the lipstick all over his throat.
To prove the point, I did do it.
To prove the point, I did do that.
She was then sent into France,
and the advantage of her was that she was an American,
so she was a neutral.
So she could exist in France quite openly,
and she was very, very successful,
and, you know, got loads of sort of circuits going
and recruited people.
And somebody at one point said,
if you go into Virginia Hall's kitchen,
you'll meet every important agent and intelligence person in France.
The thing about Virginia Hall is that she did so much,
but towards the end of her life,
the Americans never really rated or respected her.
I remember one account about her sitting at a table
surrounded by all the bigwigs of the United States at the end of the war,
and they still weren't listening to her.
They were still sort of treating her like she was a bit of the secretary.
Well, I think that that's the, I mean, it still is.
I think that's the sort of paternal attitude
that a lot of men, particularly soldiers, have towards women.
She was given a medal at the end of the war.
She was congratulated eventually by
the president. But in a way, the worst story is that of Christine Granville, who at the very end
of the war went into a Nazi jail where two agents, one of whom was her lover, were being kept
prisoner. And when she went in, the governor of the prison, who was a German, had a revolver on
the table. Her personality was so strong that By the time she'd, her personality was so strong,
that by the time she'd finished arguing with him,
he was shaking and he'd given in.
And he said, well, if you can get so many, a million,
I think a sort of million pounds of huge sum of money,
I will release these men.
So she'd gone into a place where saying, you know, I know these two men.
They could have arrested her and shot her in the spot.
Time goes by.
The war ends.
She leaves the SOE and she asks for a pension.
And she's told her, no, no, you can't have a pension.
And I've seen a piece of paper written by a civil servant which said,
tell her to go back to whence she came from.
And she wasn't given a pension.
And that was an outrageous thing. It was
as though she'd never done anything. She'd risked her life. But none of the women, I think, were
properly looked after after the war. Now, let's talk about how many women. The SOE hired around
13,000 agents in all, and only 3,200 of these were women. That's a remarkable figure, isn't it?
There were 40 women recruited into F-section.
Into F-section, which Nora Knight-Kahn was part of.
It was a very small number.
It was a very small number, yeah.
Did they have that diverse background that the men did?
Was that the same for women?
Yes, it was.
I mean, you've got the example of Christine Granville,
who's a Polish aristocrat.
And at the other end of the scale,
there's Violette Zabo, who lived in Stockwell,
and she was a shop assistant.
And in between, you've got every other stratum of the society.
Tell me about the training, the basic training that went on.
Was it different for men SOEs and women SOEs?
And what did they have to do?
They had, A, to learn their speciality,
which generally was radio operating.
They had to learn sort of unarmed combat.
They had to learn to be able to move across country.
They were taught to try to be invisible.
The worst thing you can be if you're an agent
is to have a tall, high profile.
You want to be a grey person that nobody takes any notice of.
The training was just the same as for the men.
It was pretty rigorous.
I mean, they're being shown how to deal with a much bigger man.
They're being shown how to use explosives.
They're being shown how to use wireless sets.
They're getting exactly the same training that any bloke could get.
I think the basic assumption of the trainers
was that these were women, and this is sort of metaphorically, they were going,
patting them on the head and going, there, there, dear little Orpah, be all right.
Well, I've seen some of these, and, you know, thanks to your brilliant writing and a couple
of other historians, but they are so almost condescending. Like, you know, they're being
bothered with having to train these bloody women. And it's kind of a slight imposition on their but they are so almost condescending. Like, you know, they're being bothered
with having to train these bloody women
and it's kind of a slight imposition on their time.
Yes, no, it's exactly, well, it is patronising.
It's completely, I mean, with Noor Inayat Khan,
one of her trainers, I've seen the piece of,
you know, the report that he wrote.
He said, if this girl's an agent, I'm Winston Churchill.
I've seen that.
So very rude.
Let's focus now on Noor specifically and her contribution to the war effort.
Radio operator was the job that she was given.
What does that actually mean?
What's the usual function of a radio operator?
The radio operator was the person without whom nothing would happen
because if you have no radio, you are deaf and dumb.
You can't, and you're almost blind.
I mean, you can't receive instructions and you can't and you're almost blind i mean you can't receive instructions and
you can't transmit what you've seen to london and you don't know what's going on you're operating
in a complete fog and remember that the that the german occupation of france had turned it into a
vast black hole so the radio operator was the single most important person in the operation
really without the radio operator nothing could probably happen how big was the single most important person in the operation, really. Without the radio operator, nothing could probably happen.
How big was the radio?
When we're talking about the radio, I think how heavy, how portable was this thing?
The radio would fit into an old-fashioned suitcase.
It wasn't very big, and it wasn't that heavy, but it was very noticeable.
It had little catches on the side.
You opened it up, the radio was in there.
It might have something on top of it to disguise it.
But it was a difficult thing to carry about.
And the Germans, of course, who were very, very good at counterintelligence,
were on the lookout for that.
And in order to work the radio, you had to get out an aerial,
which was wire, which is about 40 feet long.
That's a bit conspicuous.
That's a bit conspicuous it's a bit conspicuous and the equipment is is clunky and it's conspicuous it worked with morse code which
means you had to you had to know more because it's tap tap tap tap tap tap and you had to get your
transmission done as quickly as you can because the germans had a very good system for finding
these where these radios were by triangle.
They had listening posts,
which would cover the whole of France,
and they would lock on to a transmission that they could hear.
They'd have three separate stations on it,
and where those three...
The triangulation.
The triangulation, where those things met,
that's where it was.
So you had to get your transmission over, you know,
in a minute or two minutes, as quickly as you could.
Because then they'll be after you.
They'll be straight after you.
And once you've done that, you've got to pack it up
and get out of it as quickly as you can.
You must have come across so many near-miss stories
because, I mean, that's not much time.
You've got a job to do and then you've got to move, move, move
really quickly.
Very, very quickly.
I mean, I don't think there are some mistakes.
I think it's almost every time you get it out,
they're onto you.
Get it out, tap, tap, tap, get it,
pack it away, get off, get off, all the time.
So, I mean, you'd have to be technically adept.
You'd have to hold your nerve.
You'd have to have immediately,
you'd have done a recce or reconnaissance
of how can I get out of here really quickly.
But you also need information to send now were these SAEs collecting information
from other agents who would I don't know dead drop or you know tell them look you've got to
get this back to London would it be stuff that they saw themselves that they were going and
you know sort of looking through binoculars and picking up no armaments shipments I mean how did
that no I mean there were agents in the field
who were going around collecting that information,
condensing it into a sort of shorter form as possible,
taking it to the radio operator,
saying to the radio operator,
code this up and send it.
And that's what the radio operator did.
The radio operator's principal task
wasn't to go and get the information,
it was to transmit it.
They were too valuable to have them wandering around being brave.
Sure. Tell me this, how pivotal was the role of the SOE and how useful to the resistance, for example, was the work that they did?
It's very difficult to answer that question because the main point of the SOE was to gather intelligence,
to turn the black hole into somewhere that we knew about.
It was very, very important, but there are a lot of regular soldiers
who dislike what they call these freelance operations.
They think it should have been trained soldiers who knew what they were doing.
Rather than Barry from Accounts, who was doing Accounts three weeks ago.
Yes, exactly that.
Or Noah, who was an aircraft mechanic.
It's impossible to sort of quantify exactly how useful they are.
But what you can do is to say that nobody in France or anywhere in the so-called free world
knew that the war was going to end.
So the very fact that there was a resistance going on
and that there were people working against the Germans in occupied France was a very good boost
for the French population and for the world. So in terms of morale, I think they were absolutely
essential. Let's talk about the two sides around the SOE operatives.
If not husbands and wives and children,
they would have had brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers.
I mean, people who would miss them.
What did they say to them?
Look, I'm off for six weeks.
You're not...
What?
I think they would say things like,
oh, it's all right.
I'm being sent off on a course.
I'm going to be down in Devon for a bit
or I've got to go up to Scotland for a special training course in mechanics.
So I don't think it's that difficult to, you know, once you're recruited,
once you're in the operation and wearing a uniform, which they were,
to sort of pretend, well, I'm just going to vanish for a bit.
Don't worry, I'm fine. I'm just being Scotland.
So, I mean, really, they were utterly invisible.
Nobody talked about the SOE,
apart from the people who knew about the SOE.
Nobody talked about the SOE,
apart from people who knew about the SOE.
But SOE F sections headquarters were in Baker Street.
And they were told,
when you come to the headquarters,
don't get off the bus at Baker Street near the headquarters.
Go on a couple of stops and walk back. And apparently one bus conductor said,
ding, ding, Baker Street, any more spies?
Oh, really?
That's true.
People aren't stupid, are they? Not as stupid as some top brass might think.
We heard in the series that Noah's time as a spy began just as the SOE was starting to fray at the edges, just before it was starting to fall apart.
I would not entirely agree that the SOE fell apart.
I don't think it did.
I mean, it had its problems.
And there was an enormous network in northern France called PROSPER, which was penetrated and disintegrated.
And there was a sub-network in Prosper, which was called Churchill. And the reason that Noah
Kahn was sent in was that Prosper had collapsed. Churchill didn't have a radio operator.
Noah Kahn was only half-trained, and lots of people said she shouldn't be sent in.
And she went in. But I mean, the SOE operated pretty effectively, I think,
throughout France with its ups and downs.
Obviously, bits of it were blown apart.
People were captured.
Circuits were damaged.
But I don't think it's right to say that it had fallen apart.
Why was the SOE sending people who were half-cocked?
I mean, if she wasn't properly trained,
why was Noor and Ad Khan being sent somewhere so dangerous?
Because they were desperate for radio operators.
I mean, it was that serious.
And the weird thing about Noor-Nad Khan was that she was extremely erratic.
And she'd learnt Morse code in the Royal Air Force,
where she'd volunteered.
So she could send messages with terrific accuracy and fluency one day and then the next day couldn't do it at all and would break down in tears.
And I think she had a nickname of something like Bangaway Bertha
because her Morse code technique was so noisy.
And she sent, Buckwellster sent,
he said, I don't know what to do.
I want to send her.
We've got to get a radio operator in there.
We don't have one.
She's the best we've got.
And it was partly to do with desperation.
If you've only got one radio operator,
there's almost halfway there
and you're in the middle of the war,
you take the chance.
And people did say, please don't send her.
And she's not ready. I think sort of, think sort of an account of somebody who bursts into tears
you know
sporadically is somebody who is under
an enormous amount of pressure
stress as well
in all of the time that she was there
it was only a few months
she sent 120 messages
on every sort of
part of what was going on. She would
transmit at 1500 every day at three o'clock in the afternoon and she would receive at
530. So she was constantly biking around with this case, trying to hide it.
You're always on the move, you're always carrying something heavy, you're always stressed
about the message, you know, all of that.
It gets very, very stressful after a while because you think you can't trust anybody.
And she said, I'm getting so tired,
I won't be able to go on doing this.
Knowing everything that we know now,
should they have pulled her out a bit earlier?
They definitely should have done, yeah.
They were so reckless with people's lives,
but I believe, I know in fact,
that they were about to haul her out of there.
And that's not an easy thing
because you've got to get them out by Lysander aeroplane.
It takes a lot of organising.
And of course, the man who's organising it
is working for the Gestapo. Oh, goodness no-win situation. But she was arrested days before they were going to
bring her back to England. So close. So close to coming home. I often think it's extraordinary
when people sacrifice themselves for others or put themselves even in danger for others.
But the women of the SOE knew that they might face death.
They signed on willingly for this, knowing that they could lose everybody they loved, everything that they knew, everything that was home.
And they did it anyway.
That's exactly right.
They did it anyway.
They came from all walks of life. They were warned very, very graphically and clearly before they were recruited
that this was a very dangerous operation, that if they were captured, they would expect no mercy
from the Nazis and actually from their German captors. And worse than that, that they would face torture, brutality, starvation.
They would be treated as what the Germans called
Nax and Nebel prisoners, which means night and fog.
They would be turned into disappeared ones.
They would never have existed.
So they would just walk, they thought,
they would just walk into the fog,
never to be seen, never heard of again. Their sacrifice is useless.
Well, I mean, thanks to people like you, thanks to the stories that people listening to this podcast have heard. We're reaching into that fog and we're pulling people out. Tell me what
happened to the SOE after the war. I mean, it was secret all the time by necessity through the war.
Afterwards, did people acknowledge it, the role of the people who were there,
the means and manner in which some of them died?
I mean, how much light was shed on them?
Very, very little light was shed on them.
The organization sort of collapsed.
That's when it did collapse, almost within weeks of the war ending.
The SOE had no part to play. de Gaulle in France said, didn't want to give any acknowledgement that the SOE had helped. He wanted the liberation
of France and the France resistance to be French, run by Frenchmen. So they were all
sent out. A lot of the documentation was destroyed or dispersed.
Destroyed by the French or destroyed by us? No, destroyed by us.
And what's happened is that some of that stuff keeps appearing in people's lofts
or in their bottom drawers and all sorts of things.
But a lot of paperwork about what happened has vanished. When it comes to Britain now, do you think enough acknowledgement is given to these extraordinary
lives, some of which were lived in secret, lost in secret? Do we know all the stories
that we need to know now?
No, we don't know. I mean, I think there is a lot more acknowledgement of them and of
their bravery. There's a little statue of Noah Khan in London.
But there were two sisters, I can't remember their surnames,
one of whom died in a concentration camp
and the other of whom left the SOE at the end of the war and lived in Brighton.
And she was discovered dead about eight years ago in her flat.
Nobody knew who she was. Nobody knew how
important she was. Having said that, a lot of people did vanish, but a lot of people, I mean,
I'm always seeing obituaries now for very old women who were in the SOE and who've just died.
I think people are more and more aware of them. Finally, Rick, and I don't know, I don't know how you begin to answer a
question like this, but what do we owe the women of the SOE, do you think? Well, it's what I said
about Noor Khan at the beginning, that what we owe to them is to live up to the moral bar
that they set for us, that we have to live good moral lives. And when we hear things going,
think immoral things being said by our politicians
or people in power, wherever they are in the world,
however weak we feel, we have to stand up and be counted.
And there's a poem that I'd like to read for you.
Yeah, no, of course.
Which was actually Violette Zabo's Code.
But it's a lovely poem.
And for me, it sums up everything that those women gave for us.
And it was written by Leo Marx.
And it goes,
The life that I have is all that I have.
And the life that I have is yours.
The love that I have of the life that I have, and the life that I have is yours. The love that I have
of the life that I have
is yours and yours and yours.
A sleep I shall have,
a rest I shall have,
yet death will be but a pause.
For the peace of my years
in the long green grass
will be yours and yours and yours. for the peace of my years in the long green grass,
will be yours and yours and yours.
And that's what those women were for me. That's beautiful.
Rick Stroud, thank you very much indeed.
Thank you.
Just to remind you all, Rick Stroud's book is Lonely Courage,
the true story of the SOE heroines
who fought to free Nazi-occupied France.
And that brings us to the end of our season on Noor-e-Nayyad Khan.
Do join us for the next season,
The Spy Who Betrayed Bin Laden,
hosted by Raza Jafri.
Next time, we open the file on Ayman Deen, the spy who betrayed Bin Laden.
In 1994, 16-year-old Ayman wants to die.
He heads to Bosnia to join the Mujahideen and save his fellow Muslims.
He hopes to become a martyr.
Instead, he's about to be confronted by a cruel and bloody reality.
Wondery Plus subscribers can binge full seasons of The Spy Who early
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