Exotic British spy who defied Gestapo brutality to the end
By Alan Hamilton

The story of a prince's daughter and the SS guard who tortured and shot her has been uncovered.

Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan (SOE Agent)
1914-1944

 
Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan occupied "the principal and most dangerous post in France" until her capture and execution by the Nazis in 1944. Her diary identifies her prison-camp torturer. (THE KHAN FAMILY)
 
SHE was one of the most beautiful, exotic and unlikely spies to
serve the Allies in wartime Europe. Like so many others, she
perished at the hands of the SS in Dachau concentration camp.

Research in British and German archives has uncovered the full story of Noor-un-nisa Inayat Khan, who was born in pre-revolutionary Moscow to an Indian mystic prince and an American woman. She joined Britain's Special Operations Executive and was betrayed with her radio as she transmitted from occupied Paris.

When her 225-page personal file was released recently by the
National Archives in London, it was found to contain one
extraordinary fact: the name of the SS camp guard who beat her to a pulp before shooting her through the back of the head. Yet she never betrayed a secret and died with the single word liberté on her
bruised and bleeding lips.

One of only three wartime women to be awarded the George Cross, the highest decoration for gallantry away from the field of battle, Noor is the least known. Her fellow Resistance workers have been commemorated in feature films: Odette Hallowes was played by Anna Neagle in Odette and Violette Szabo by Virginia McKenna in Carve Her Name With Pride.

There have been books about Noor, but new light will be shed on her short yet remarkable life in a Timewatch documentary to be shown on BBC Two next Friday.

In 1958, a former Dutch prisoner of the Nazis known as "A.F." who witnessed Noor's execution read her biography and wrote to its author, Jean Overton Fuller. He revealed her killer to be Wilhelm Ruppert, a sadistic SS guard at the camp, and he described Noor's last moments on September 12, 1944.

"The SS undressed the girl and she was terribly beaten by Ruppert
all over her body. She did not cry, neither said anything. When
Ruppert got tired and the girl was a bloody mess he told her then he would shoot her. She had to kneel and the only word she said, before Ruppert shot her from behind through the head, was `liberté'." She was 30 years old.

Even before her wartime service, Noor's life was out of the
ordinary. Descended from a Muslim prince who died resisting the
British Raj, she spent her early childhood among the Tsarist
nobility before the 1917 revolution forced her family to flee to
France. When Paris fell to the Germans in 1940, they had to seek
refuge again, this time in England.

Driven by ideals of freedom and calling herself Nora Baker, she
volunteered for SOE, which specialised in dropping agents behind
enemy lines. Trained at the secret Baker Street headquarters, she
proved a poor recruit, being too clumsy, too emotional and too
scared of handling weapons.

Bob Maloubier, another French refugee trained at Baker Street, sent home to become a successful saboteur and now aged 83, said
yesterday: "Above all she was definitely a very brave lady. It was
extremely tricky operating under the noses of the Germans."

Noor's courage and determination outweighed her ineptitude, and her masters sent her into France with a radio set and the codename
Madeleine on June 16, 1943.

From the start she was on the run, moving her radio all over Paris
to transmit details of troop movements essential for the planning of
the D-Day invasion. The Prosper underground network of which she was a vital link was quickly penetrated by the Germans, thanks to an SOE double agent, Henri D. She was ordered home, but declined to board the RAF Lysander sent for her and carried on transmitting as virtually the last link between the Resistance and London.

General Sir Colin Gubbins, the head of SOE, said that she
occupied "the principal and most dangerous post in France". She had remarkable luck; stopped by the Gestapo as she cycled with her radio, she persuaded them that it was a cine projector. But after 3½ months her luck ran out; she was betrayed by Renée Garry, the sister of one of her Resistance colleagues. Garry is thought to have been jealous of her role as an SOE agent.

When captured, Noor was carrying a codebook listing all her radio
messages, sent and received, which allowed the Germans to send false messages to London for a time. But after the war the former head of the Gestapo in Paris said that despite interrogation and torture, Noor never told them a thing.

She had been dead eight years when her nephew, David Harper, was born, but from endless family chatter he feels as if he knew
her. "She was a paradox. She was sensitive, a lover of music and
poetry, a musician and writer of children's stories. Yet she was
terribly strong-willed and prepared to risk her life for a cause;
she was fighting for an ideal, like so many others at that time," he
said. SS Trooper Wilhelm Ruppert was tried for war crimes and executed by the Americans on May 29, 1946.
ynn Philip Hodgson and Alan Paul Longfield would like to invite you to the gala release of their new book, the seventh in the series