The Spy Princess's Fatal Mistake | True Life Spy Stories

Ways to support the channel: Become a Member:    / @philipthompson   Buy Me a Coffee: ☕ https://bmc.link/philipthompson Donate via PayPal: 💸 paypal.me/PhilipT284 Listen to my spy stories on the True Life Spy Stories podcast! 🎙️https://creators.spotify.com/pod/show... 13 October 1943. For four months, the Gestapo in Paris had been hunting a British wireless operator codenamed Madeleine. She changed her appearance and safe houses constantly, vanishing every time the German direction-finding vans closed in on her signal. She was the only Allied radio link left in the city. Every other operator was locked up, or dead. But her luck had sadly run out. On the thirteenth of October, the Gestapo set a trap. They had a name. They had an address. And they were waiting. What happened next would determine the fate of the entire Allied network in Paris. The Germans had finally caught their ghost. She was the most unlikely of secret agents - she was a pacifist and the daughter of a Sufi mystic descended from Indian Muslim royalty. Post-war accounts referred to her as the Spy Princess. Her name was Noor Inayat Khan, and this is her story. 📚 Sources & Further Reading (affiliate links): 📕 Spy Princess: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan by Shrabani Basu - https://amzn.to/4bNhvP9 📘 Agent Noor: The World War II Spy Who Made the Ultimate Sacrifice by Ethan Quinn - https://amzn.to/4dlXIri 📕 A Forgotten Woman: The Story of the Unsung Heroine of the SOE Noor Inayat Khan by Iris Jenkins - https://amzn.to/3N7rLbJ 📘 A Life In Secrets: Vera Atkins and the Lost Agents of SOE by Sarah Helm - https://amzn.to/4lvxwfM 📕 Between Silk and Cyanide: A Code Maker's War, 1941-45 by Leo Marks - https://amzn.to/3NFxsOc #philipthompson #truelifespystories #espionage