Christine
Granville Britain’s first female Special Agent of World War II, was Churchill’s
favourite spy. A woman who loved adventure, her exploits and espionage work
during WWII are truly mind boggling.
"Krystyna Skarbek" by Source. Licensed under Fair use via Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Krystyna_Skarbek.jpg#/media/File:Krystyna_Skarbek.jpg |
Krystyna
was born on the 1st of May 1908 in Warsaw, to Roman Catholic Count
Jerzy Skarbeck and a wealthy Jewish heiress from a Banking family, Stephanie
Goldfeder. She was greatly influenced by her father who encouraged her to be a
tomboy, and created in her a love for the outdoors. Horse riding and skiing
were skills she acquired from a young age.
But
Count Jerzy Skarbeck loved the good things of life and squandered the wealth of
his wife, leaving the family in straightened circumstances on his death in
1930. To support the family, Krystyna took up a job in a Fiat dealership
company. She had to give it up within a few months as she developed severe
allergy to the automobile fumes. On medical advice she spent more time outdoors
and became an expert in hiking and skiing in the Tatra range of mountains in
southern Poland.
Krystyna’s
first marriage to Gustav Gettlich a businessman on 21st April 1930
fizzled out within a short time. Her second marriage was to Jerzy Gizycki a wealthy
brilliant eccentric who shared her love for adventure, on November 2nd
1938. He was sent to Ethiopia as a Polish Consul General, where he stayed till
September 1939. But when WWII broke out and Germany invaded Poland, the couple
moved to London, where Krystyna offered her services to the British Secret
Intelligence. In 1940 she became a Special Operations Executive (SOE) and was
given various tasks of sabotage and undercover missions for the Allied forces
in Europe. The SOE was involved in espionage, reconnaissance and sabotage
missions. Krystyna started using the pseudonym Christine Granville in 1941.
(Later in 1946, when she became a British citizen, she legally adopted the
name.)
Christine
became an Intelligence Courier skiing over the Tatra Mountains at night, in
temperatures sometimes as low as -30C, to dodge the Border Patrols. With her
bravado and cunning she was well suited for the job. She took British
propaganda into Warsaw to bolster the spirit of the Polish Resistance. Then she
skied back over the mountains with secret information about the deployment of
German SS and Wermacht units stationed around Warsaw. She helped organize a
system of Polish couriers who brought Intelligence from Warsaw to Budapest.
In
1941 she was arrested by the Gestapo along with a Polish Army officer Andrzy
Kowerski, and faced torture and death. But with her penchant for cunning, she
bit her tongue to make it bleed and pretended to be suffering from
Tuberculosis. Terrified of contracting the disease, the Gestapo officers set both
of them free. Kowerski the one-legged Polish hero and Christine had a long and
serious relationship since they met in Budapest in 1939. They worked together
in Budapest, Poland and Cairo. This however did not prevent her from having
affairs with other young men. She even dated Ian Fleming for over a year. He
was so impressed by this brave lady who travelled with a knife taped to her
thigh and a suicidal pendant around her neck, that his heroine Vesper Lynd in
Casino Royale was modeled on Christine.
Christine’s
greatest exploit was shortly before the Allies invaded France in 1944. She
parachuted into France as Madam Pauline Armand, to assist the French Resistance
fighters in advance of the American ground invasion. Francis Cammaerts and his
men of the French Resistance were caught by the Nazis and faced execution.
Christine stormed the office of the prison guard in Digne, posing as a British
agent. She announced that Digne was soon to be bombed and the Allies were
advancing rapidly. The guard could only save himself by releasing the French
prisoners and seeking pardon. He took her to the Gestapo officer who was in
charge. Christine threatened him with death at the hands of the French mob when
the Allies attacked. She also offered him a bribe of two million francs.
Cammaerts and his men were released and went on to be the key liberators of
France. Her daring act restored Christine’s political and military reputation,
as there were some in British Intelligence who suspected her of being a German
spy. She was the only female subaltern who was promoted to Captain. She worked
in Europe till the end of the war.
Post
war, Christine was not absorbed into the British Intelligence Service but was
discharged with five months of severance salary. Because of the Anglo-American
betrayal of her country at the Yalta Conference in 1945 to Stalin’s ruthless
regime, Christine was rendered stateless. The British dragged their feet over
her citizenship until 1946. By now she was divorced from her husband. With no
financial reserves to fall back on, this once flamboyant anti-Nazi agent took
on a low paying job as stewardess on the Union Castle Line. She booked into the
cheap Selborne Hotel in Earl’s Court on June 11th !952. She was stabbed
to death in the lobby on 15th June, by a man named Dennis Muldowney whose advances she had spurned.
By Dobry77 (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons |
Christine’s planned meeting after the war, with long time lover Andrzy Kowerski never took place. This brave woman who was once a law unto herself was interred in St. Mary’s Catholic Cemetery in Kensal Green, North London. Kowerski died in Munich in 1988 and his ashes were flown to London, to be buried at the foot of her grave.
Christine
was awarded the George Medal for her exploits in Digne. In May 1947, she was made
Officer of the Order of the British Empire for her war work in conjunction with
British Secret Service. The French decorated her with the Croix de Guerre for her
contribution to the liberation of France.
One
is left with the feeling that this daring Polish espionage agent in spite of being
Churchill’s favourite spy, was eventually short changed by Britain.