Cast your mind back to being 21 years old, not just a young person but an individual who had just given birth to her first child. Not only that, but had just been informed that on the 24th October 1942, their husband of two years had been killed whilst in action in North Africa.
Would you have decided to disappear into a state of grief and sorrow, or sign up to undertake one of the most dangerous roles available for women in the Second World War?
The amazing Violette Szabo chose the latter, not that she had exactly been shirking her responsibilities beforehand, almost as soon as war broke out she signed up for the Land Army, then moving back to London to work in an armaments factory, followed by operating the switchboard at the General Post Office (staying in her job throughout the blitz) again in the country’s capitol, before moving to the Auxiliary Territorial Services (ATS) and being trained to operate anti aircraft batteries.
During this period she had met, fallen in love and after a whirlwind forty two day courtship, had married Etienne Szabo, a French Foreign Legion soldier who had been in London for the Bastille Day celebration but was part of the Free French forces.
Fast forward to October 1942, and Violette leaves her four month old daughter Tania with carers and she begins her training to be a part of Section F of the Special Operations Executive. She was already a fluent French speaker, her mother being from Pont Remy in the Somme and her father being British (her parents had met during the First World War). With her ability to speak both languages easily (and with local accents), her knowledge of weaponry already gained from her training with the ATS and her inherent bravery, the only thing she appeared to struggle with was mastering parachute jumping – having broken her ankle on her first attempt.
It was during her second operation for the secretive organisation that things were to go very wrong, dropped into France on the 7th June 1944 - immediately after D-Day – with the objective of helping local resistance groups sabotage the German communication lines that were co-ordinating attacks to stem the landings by the Allies. Both Violette – known as “La Petite Anglaise due to her diminutive 5ft3 height – and her SOE commander, Phillipe Liewer found that the maquis – the local resistance fighters – to be very poorly organised, needing guidance and a more efficient control. The other area the maquis had made a mistake on was intelligence gathering, and had not realised that the SS Panzer division were a lot closer than believed.
Szabo also chose to travel by car, rather than the more inconspicuous bicycle, this was also a poor decision as following D-Day, the German forces had banned all automobile travel and by flouting this rule, she had a target on her back.
Stopped at a road block, the classic story is that a gun battle ensued, but there is some doubt as to whether this really happened, opinions differ almost on a fifty/fifty basis, but regardless of whether our heroine did shoot at German solders for over half an hour, the fact that she was arrested and removed to the incredibly foreboding Fresnes Prison in Paris are without question.
She was interrogated by the Gestapo; they knew by this point that she was SOE and wanted names. We know that they would have used torture, whether that was by sexually assaulting her, beating her, pretending to drown her in a bath tub and many other methods we cannot say, but she did not break.
This both beautiful and brave young woman was sent to Ravensbruck, chained to another female SOE operative. Even in shackles her courage did not leave her, when their train was strafed by Allied aircraft, she managed to get water to some of the male prisoners in another carriage who had been left by the German soldiers who had run for cover.
After months of hard labour, a method employed by the Nazis to kill off as many prisoners as possible, a week after the liberation of Auschwitz by the Russians and the German fear of the forthcoming arrival of the Red Army in Berlin, orders were given to murder certain prisoners. Violette and two of her colleagues- Denise Bloch and Lilian Rolfe – were lined up, forced to their knees and shot in the back of their heads.
Of the forty two female Section F SOE agents, just under two thirds survived the war, with twelve being executed, one drowning when her ship was torpedoed, two dying from disease whilst imprisoned and one from natural causes.
Whilst Violette is probably one of the best known female SOE operatives, she is not the only one, and we should remember all those women who sacrificed their easy life to do their part against the Nazi war machine.
If you want to learn more about Mrs Szabo, check out www.violette.Szabo.museum.co.uk and learn more about her.