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The Spy Who Loved The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville. written by Clare Mulley presented by Kayla Allen. Early Life. born Krystyna Skarbek lived 1908 – 1952 spent her childhood “basking in her father’s attention, and supported… by her mother’s love and money”. Young Adulthood.
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The Spy Who LovedThe Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville written by Clare Mulley presented by Kayla Allen
Early Life • born Krystyna Skarbek • lived 1908 – 1952 • spent her childhood “basking in her father’s attention, and supported…by her mother’s love and money”
Young Adulthood • grew disillusioned with her family; spent lots of time skiing and partying in Zakopane • married and subsequently divorced German businessman Gustav Gettlich • looked down upon for being poor, Jewish, undomesticated, and divorced • married Polish diplomat Jerzy Gizycki
War Begins • Christine and Jerzy were working for the Polish Foreign Office in Africa when Hitler invaded Poland • Britain and France were the first nations to declare war on Germany • Christine and Jerzy sailed immediately to London to try to find intelligence work
“Lost – a pair of lady’s pink panties. Lost – Warsaw.”
Intelligence Networks • SIS (Secret Intelligence Service) • Section D • SOE (Special Operations Executive) • led by Lieutenant Colonel Colin Gubbins • ZWZ (Union of Armed Struggle) • The Musketeers • led by Stefan Witkowski
AndrzejKowerski • Chistine’s childhood friend • had a false leg • Lieutenant in the Black Brigade • the “Scarlet Pimpernel of Poland”
First Mission • official objectives: • “to counter the anti-British propaganda of the Germans by spreading British propaganda” • “to collect and transmit intelligence” • Christine believed that accepting propaganda was “the first step toward accepting occupation”
entered Budapest disguised as a French journalist skied into Zakopane, guided by a member of the Polish Olympic Ski Team took a train to Warsaw
Smuggling • Christine and Andrzejused their networks to smuggle money, arms, and weapons into Poland and intelligence and people out • Andrzej was responsible for the exfiltration of 5,000 Polish and Czechoslovakian officers in 1940 • Christine crossed the Polish border six times and Slovakian border eight times while helping him
Escape • arrested by the Gestapo in Budapest and interrogated for twenty-four hours straight • Christine faked tuberculosis to get them released • got false passports and visas from their friends at the British Legation • first appearance of the name “Christine Granville” • Andrzej snuck over the border into Yugoslavia with Christine in the trunk of his car
Intrigue • Christine and Andrzej traveled from Yugoslavia to Istanbul to Cairo • Christine delivered some of the first information about Hitler’s plan to attack Russia • however, they were no longer trusted by British or Polish intelligence • after months, they were sent to collect intelligence in Jerusalem and then in Syria
Christine and Andrzej in Syria, 1942 Christine in Palestine, 1942
Training • Andrzej was sent to Italy • Christine underwent training for France • agents in France had a life expectancy of six weeks
Training • Morse code and wireless signaling • parachuting • firearms • silent killing • spy tradecraft • airdrop organization
Francis Cammaerts • socialist and pacifist • motivated to enlist by the birth of his first daughter in 1942 • head of the Jockey circuit • intelligence and resistance
SOE Circuits • organized around three key roles • leader: Francis Cammaerts, codename Roger • wireless operator: AugusteDeschamps, codename Albert • courier: Christine Granville, codename Pauline • had networks of spies, saboteurs, and resistance fighters
The Courier’s Work • Christine organized air drops of weapons and explosives, warm clothes, radio batteries, cash, and treats such as chocolate and cigarettes • also conveyed messages between branches of Francis’s network and the Maquis, a French resistance group
Battle of Vercors • French Forces (FFI) absorbed the Jockey Circuit • engaged German forces in southern France • Germans responded with enormous strength, winning the battle • Francis, Christine, and Albert worked to secure much-needed air drops from the Allies, but barely anything came • the French and the Jockeys dispersed into the Alps
Heroism • Francis, Christine, and company gathered intelligence about German forces while in the Alps • Christine convinced 63 conscripted Poles in a German garrison to join the FFI • the Gestapo arrested Francis and two other officers • Christine rescued them by revealing herself as a spyand then bribing and threatening the officer that held them
End of the War • after the liberation of France, Christine trained to become a courier in Poland • the war ended before she could parachute in • dismissed from the SOE with a month’s salary and left to her own devices in Cairo • she couldn’t return to Poland during Soviet occupation
“Perhaps the real tragedy was that she was denied the chance to discover what she might have been in a post-war world.”
Dismissal • “the qualities still so highly recognized in male agents were no longer recognized in [Christine]” • London didn’t give her the extra pay she deserved and wouldn’t help her gain British citizenship • they did, however, send her notes that said, “Hope you are being a good girl!’ and one officer told her about her “feminine absence of understanding for such matters”
Looking for Work • spent time traveling in Africa and the Middle East • finally settled in London and worked small jobs: telephone operator, a waitress, a hat-check clerk • tried to open a car dealership with Andrzej and some contacts from the war • accepted work as a stewardess for the New Zealand Shipping Company
Dennis Muldowney • wife had divorced him, “citing cruelty and the excessive ‘sexual demands’ he made upon her • only steward that was friendly to Christine • fell in love with her, and became angry when Christine did not return his affections • stabbed her to death in the lobby of her hotel • final words: “to kill is the final possession”
Who Was Christine? Femme Fatale? Maternal Figure?
“Christine loved passionately. She loved men and sex, adrenalin and adventure, her family and her country; she loved life, and the freedom to live it to the full. When that freedom was…threatened by invasion, occupation, and terrorism, she fought back with a passion, patriotism, determination and courage unsurpassed by any other special agent in the Second World War.”