13 September 1944, Dachau concentration camp, Germany –
The air was cold as the young women prisoners struggled towards the camp with their bags. The first chilling sight was of the camp’s searchlights, visible from afar. As the beams swept the area, the new arrivals could see the high walls of the camp, and the barbed wire. Built in 1933, it was the first concentration camp to be constructed by Hitler……..
Noor and her colleagues were taken through the main gate of the camp inscribed with the words Arbeit Macht Frei (Work Will Make You Free). The words were ironic because few walked free from Dachau. Over 30,000 people were exterminated here between 1933 and 1945.
As they entered the camp, they could see the line of barracks on their left. Inside, in rows of dirty bunk beds, lay the inmates, crammed like cattle, half starved and thinly clad, inhabiting a world somewhere between the living and the dead. Along the side of the barracks ran the electric fences covered with barbed wire and the deep trench which prisoners were warned not to cross. Further down was the crematorium.
Outside it stood a single post with an iron hook. Here the Gestapo hanged their prisoners, often stringing them up from meat hooks with piano wire and leaving them to die slowly….
The four young women were taken to the main registration office and then led to their cells where they were locked up separately. In the early hours of the morning, the SS guards dragged Madeleine Damerment, Eliane Plewman and Yolande Beekman from their cells, marched them past the barracks to the crematorium and shot them through the back of their necks.
For Noor, it was to be a long night. As the prisoner who had been labelled ‘highly dangerous’, she was singled out for further torture. The Germans entered her cell, slapped her brutally and called her names. Then they stripped her. Once again she bore it silently. All through the night they kicked her with their thick leather boots, savaging her frail body. As dawn broke over the death camp, Noor lay on the floor battered and bleeding but still defiant. An SS soldier ordered her to kneel and pushed his pistol against her head.
‘Liberté!’ shouted Noor, as he shot her at point blank range. Her weak and fragile body crumpled on the floor. She was only thirty.
Biographies on Noor Inayat Khan from over the years indicate how some have interpreted her life story and iconic image.
In the first of these, which is entitled Madeleine and was published approximately a decade after her death, Jean Overton Fuller—who was Noor’s personal friend—writes that six of the seven publishing companies to which she had submitted her biography discarded it because of its divided appeal, on the one hand to readers interested in the Indian background of “the Sufi Princess” and on the other those accustomed to her life as “heroine of the Resistance.”
The book enjoyed reasonable success and was reprinted in 1971, with additional material on Noor’s Sufi heritage and on her ancestors, a topic that captured the interest of Mr. Wite Carp, the publisher of East-West Publications, as well as more information on her wartime activities that had come to light since 1952.
Fuller’s study thus differs from others by showing similarities between Noor’s life experiences, a brief glimpse of her literary works, and her role during the war.
This biography, by Shrabani Basu, draws from materials covered by Fuller as well as from interviews with Noor’s relatives and data from her SOE personal files, which became accessible in 2003.
Basu’s book has been divided into ten chapters:
1) Babuli
2) Fazal Manzil
3) Three Flight and Fight
4) Setting Europe Ablaze
5) Codes and Cover Stories
6) Leaving England
7) Joining the Circuit
8) The Fall of Prosper
9) Poste Madeleine
10) Prisoner of the Gestapo
As one of the first women to be penetrated into Nazi-occupied France by the Special Operations Executive (SOE) after the closing stages of the war, Noor Inayat Khan received posthumous praises from both France and Great Britain for making the definitive sacrifice as a heroic résistante.
Since then her contributions have by no means been forgotten, and the expansion of interest in her military career extends to recent literature and film about her.
Noor sacrificed her life to serve the country which had sheltered her family. She remained factual to her beliefs even when inhumanly tortured by the Nazis, never lying and never informing on others.
Radio operators were not expected to survive more than a few weeks, yet she not only carried on for four months, but did the work of about six operators at a time when the Germans were vigorously pursuing her.
History is unsure of who deceived Noor. Some consider that it may have been Renée Garry, Henri Garry’s sister, who was envious of Noor and of her camaraderie with Antelme, but Renée was found not culpable in a trial held after the war.
Noor may have been betrayed by another agent, either a double agent working both for the SOE and the Nazis, or even a fellow agent who revealed her identity under torment.
Of the agents mentioned in this account, only Marguerite Garry, Viennot, Gieules, Germaine Aigrain, Professor Balachowsky and John Starr survived the war.
The rest were all killed by the Nazis, most of them, like Noor, in concentration camps.
Himmler, Hitler’s right-hand man, ordered that all secret agents should be executed, but only after they had been tortured into illuminating every fragment of information that would facilitate the Germans to arrest other agents.
Noor became a prolific writer during the years leading up to her premature death at age thirty, and her personal communication indicates that writing was a foremost part of her life regardless of the many privations she endured during that time.
In her Introduction, Basu writes: “Noor was an international person: Indian, French and British at the same time. However, she is better known in France than in Britain or India. In France she is a heroine. They know her as Madeleine of the Resistance and every year a military band plays outside her childhood home on Bastille Day. A square in Suresnes has been named Cours Madeleine after her.
She has inspired a best-selling novel La Princesse Oubliée (The Forgotten Princess) by Laurent Joffrin, which has also been translated into German. Joffrin has given her lovers she did not have and taken her through paths she did not walk; it is a work of fiction.
Sixty years after the war, Noor’s vision and courage are inspirational. I hope my book brings the story of Noor Inayat Khan to a new generation for whom the sacrifices made for freedom are already becoming a footnote in history…”
After Noor’s death, in acknowledgment of her courage, her faithfulness and her strength of will, the British awarded her the George Cross. The French, too, conferred on her the highest civilian award: the Croix de Guerre with Gold Star.
In Gordon Square, London, close to the house where she lived in 1914, a statue of Noor has been erected in memory of her life and her contribution to Britain.
A most recommended book.