Thank you, Magic. I would love to meet her.
I would have to put the one legged SOE/OSS Agent Virginia Hall at the top of my heroines list. It has been said that the Germans called her "the most dangerous of the allied spies" in France.
http://www.64-baker-street.org/agents/a ... _hall.htmlVirginia shares that front position with the frail and delicate Noor Inayat Kahn, author of children's books, and the first woman wireless operator to be sent to occupied France. Eventually captured by the Germans, interrogated daily (probably under torture) for five weeks, she gave no secrets away.
http://www.64-baker-street.org/agents/a ... _khan.htmlOn a personal note, in 1974, her younger brother who introduced me to the spiritual tradition that I follow today.
And then we have the quiet heroines whose work was far less exciting, and remains less well known. Of course we know about Josephine and Ruby and their work as couriers running code from D.C. to New York, but almost no one remembers Margaret Priestly, the Oxford Don, who served in the London offices of IIain Fleming's "Red Indians." Her ability to analyze diverse documents and juggle mental maps surely paid off in the tremendous amount of classified materials that Fleming's group was able to recover from German and Italian strongholds before they were overrun by the advancing Allies.
Margaret and Virginia were both modest about their accomplishments and insisted that their post war award services be conducted as quietly as possible.
Virgina, Noor, Margaret, Ruby, Jo....and to the oh-so-many more unnamed women who have served the cause of liberty: May your efforts never be in vain.
rose