world war ii: krystyna skarbek
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World War II: Krystyna Skarbek. Dominique King. May 1,1908 Born in Warsaw to Count Jerzy Skarbek , a Catholic, and Stefania née Goldfeder , the daughter of a wealthy assimilated Jewish family. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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WORLD WAR II: KRYSTYNA SKARBEK
Dominique King
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May 1,1908 Born in Warsaw to
Count Jerzy Skarbek, a Catholic, and Stefania
née Goldfeder, the daughter of a wealthy assimilated Jewish
family.
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Like my father, I enjoyed riding ponies. I also enjoyed climbing
trees and learning how to shoot guns.
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After World War One, a Great Depression
occurred in Europe. As a result, Goldfeder
bank collapsed and with it the Skarbek family’s
grand lifestyle.
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June 26,1930Father passed away due
to tuberculosis.
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July 5, 1930 There was barely enough money to
support my widowed Mother. Not wishing to be a burden to her, I took a job at
a Fiat car dealership. But, I soon became ill due to the fumes and had to
leave the job.
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To improve my health, the family doctor advised me to lead as much of an open-air life as I could. I began
spending a great deal of time hiking and skiing the Tatra
Mountains of southern Poland.
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November 2, 1938
Jerzy Giżycki and I married at the Evangelical Reformed
Church in Warsaw. Soon after, he accepted a diplomatic posting to
Ethiopia, where he served as Poland’s consul general. We left Europe for colonial
living in Africa.
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September 1, 1939When my husband and I heard
Germany began to invade Poland, we sailed for London, England, where I sought to offer my services in the
struggle against the common enemy.
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My acquaintance, a journalist,
Frederick Augustus Voigt introduced me to the Secret Intelligence
Service (SIS).
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December 21, 1939I departed for Budapest after my plan had been approved by The British
Special Operations Executive. My plan was to go to Budapest, Hungary, print propaganda leaflets, and ski into Poland across the Tatra mountain range. I would then undertake
intelligence missions and assist Polish resistance fighters in escaping from
the country.
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Arriving in Warsaw, I located my mother, who was of Jewish blood. I
pleaded with her mother to leave Nazi-occupied Poland. She refused and died at the hands of the occupying Germans
in Warsaw's Pawiak prison.
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In Budapest, I met the Polish war hero Andrzej Kowerski. I knew him as
a child. We worked together collecting intelligence. As our
work for the SOE expanded, I was given the name Christine Granville, and he
became Andrew Kennedy. We fell in love. And
though my marriage with Gizycki ended, Kowerski and I never married.
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I helped organize a system of Polish couriers who brought intelligence reports from
Warsaw to Budapest. Andrzej Kowerski's cousin Ludwik Popiel and I managed to smuggle out the unique Polish anti-tank
rifle, model 35, with the stock and barrel sawed off for easier
transport.
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J anuary 1941Kowerski and I were arrested by the Gestapo. I won our
release, feigning symptoms of pulmonary tuberculosis by biting my tongue until it bled. We then made our way through hundreds of miles of Nazi-occupied territory to SIS headquarters in Cairo,
Egypt.
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June 22, 1941
My prediction that Germany would invade the Soviet Union came true. I was once again in the SOE's good graces.
British prime minister, Winston Churchill, dubbed
me his favorite spy.
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22 June 1941As my intelligence had
obtained, Germany had started Operation Barbarossa, an
invasion of the Soviet Union. This document is a German diary found detailing the beginning
of the operation.
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1944Fluent in French, I was
offered to SOE's teams in France. I began Parachute training in Cairo, Egypt
and would use this training for numerous
jumps into Nazi-occupied France.
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July 6, 1944 As "Pauline Armand", I parachuted into southeastern France on and
became part of the "Jockey" network directed by a Belgian-British lapsed
pacifist, Francis Cammaerts. I assisted Cammaerts by linking Italian partisans and French Maquis for joint operations against the Germans in the Alps and by inducing non-Germans,
especially conscripted Poles, in the German occupation forces to defect to
the Allies.
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August 13, 1944At Digne, comrades of mine—Cammaerts, Xan Fielding and a French officer, Christian Sorensen—were arrested at a roadblock by the Gestapo. Learning that they were to be
executed, I managed to meet with Capt. Albert Schenck, an Alsatian who acted as liaison officer between the local
French prefecture and the Gestapo. I introduced myself as a niece of British General Bernard Montgomery and threatened
Schenck with terrible retribution if harm came to the prisoners. They were released.
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After the war, Xan Fielding—the man I saved from the
gestapo—wrote this book and dedicated it to me.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krystyna_Skarbek
• http://nigelperrin.com/christinegranville.htm#.U0V4C8tOXcs
• http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/07/07/world-war-two-s-most-glamorous-spy-christine-granville.html
• Google.com