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War History Online
The Oversteegen Sisters Joined The Dutch Resistance to Assassinate German Soldiers During World War II
By Clare Fitzgerald,
5 days ago
During World War II , many resistance movements became active in countries occupied by the Wehrmacht . These groups diligently fought to sabotage their occupiers. Although most resistance fighters were male, some women combatants used their charm and seemingly innocent appearance to gain a strategic advantage.
Freddie and Truus Oversteegen
Freddie and Truus Oversteegen with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte during the War Mobilization Cross ceremony, 2014. (Photo Credit: Ministerie van Defensie / Wikimedia Commons CC0 1.0)
Truus and Freddie Oversteegen grew up in the Dutch city of Haarlem with their single mother. Freddie was two years younger than Truus and looked even younger when she wore her hair in braids, something that worked in her favor when she joined the Dutch Resistance.
Their mother was a Communist, and from a young age taught them the importance of fighting injustice. When the war broke out in 1939, she hid people from Lithuania and a Jewish couple in their home. This influenced the girls' later actions, as they learned they needed to make sacrifices in order to help others.
Joining the Dutch Resistance
Dutch Resistance members with captured German arms during the country's liberation, 1944. (Photo Credit: Keystone Features / Getty Images)
In May 1940, Germany launched an invasion of the Netherlands, commencing an occupation that lasted until the war's conclusion. As in other occupied nations, significant efforts were undertaken to deport Jews, while non-Jewish residents endured severe living conditions.
The invasion sparked the defiance of Truus and Freddie. Collaborating with their mother, they spread anti-German literature and newspapers for the Resistance. Their actions attracted the notice of Frans van der Wiel, a leader in the Haarlem Resistance Group. He visited the Oversteegen household and sought their mother's consent for the girls to participate in Resistance activities, to which she agreed.
They did different jobs for the Resistance
Dutch Resistance group operating near Dalfsen, Ommen and Lemelerveld. (Photo Credit: Unknown Author / Wikimedia Commons CC0 1.0)
Freddie and Truus didn't know what working with the Resistance would entail. To start, they were tasked with disabling bridges and railroads with dynamite, particularly the rail line between Ijmuiden and Haarlem. They also burned down a German warehouse, and aided in the smuggling of Jewish children out of the country - they even helped them escape concentration camps.
The girls' gender aided in their success, as Resistance activities were largely viewed as being conducted by males. The Germans assumed women were only involved in distributing newspapers and other documents. As they were female - and not to mention young - they were able to skirt by with little suspicion.
Becoming assassins
Members of the Dutch Resistance speaking with the 101st Airborne Division during Operation Market Garden, September 1944. (Photo Credit: CIA / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
Before long, the girls were tasked with carrying out assassinations of Germans and Dutch collaborators . Using their youthful appearance, they lured German officers into the woods - either while on patrol or in a local tavern - and shot them. According to Freddie, it was something they had to do. "It was a necessary evil, killing those who betrayed the good people," she said .
In 1943, the sisters joined up with Hannie Schaft , a former university student who'd dropped out after refusing to sign a loyalty pledge to Germany. She'd started out with small acts, such as stealing identification cards for Jewish people. When she began assassinating Germans, she became known as "the girl with the red hair."
Working with Hannie Schaft
Hannie Schaft, late 1930s-early '40s. (Photo Credit: Unknown Photographer / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
The trio formed an assassination and sabotage cell. Along with assassinations, they hid firearms in the baskets of their bicycles, and at one point erected a Communist flag at the headquarters of the National Socialist Movement. They were so efficient that, by the end of the war, there was a 50,000 guilders reward for their capture.
On March 21, 1945, Hannie was arrested at a military checkpoint in Haarlem while in possession of the illegal Communist newspaper, de Waarheid . She was subsequently interrogated, and on April 17, 1945, was executed by Dutch officials. Following the conclusion of the war, she was buried with honors in the presence of Queen Wilhelmina and Prince Bernhard, and today over 15 cities in the Netherlands have streets named after her.
Post-war struggles
Truus Oversteegen at Hannie Shaft's memorial, 1985. (Photo Credit: Poppe de Boer / Wikimedia Commons CC0 1.0)
Truus and Freddie never revealed how many people they killed throughout the duration of their Resistance work. When asked, Freddie replied that they were soldiers and soldiers don't reveal such details.
Following the war, Freddie and Truus struggled with the trauma of their friend's death and the murders they'd committed. To cope, Truus became an artist and spoke at war memorial services. Freddie coped "by getting married and having babies," yet nothing could help the insomnia she suffered.
The sisters were awarded the War Mobilization Cross
Truus Oversteegen with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte during the War Mobilization Cross ceremony, 2014. (Photo Credit: Evert-Jan Daniels, Ministerie van Defensie / Wikimedia Commons CC0 1.0)
The pair didn't immediately receive recognition for their actions, as they were labelled as Communists. In 1967, Truus was recognized as Righteous Among the Nations, an honor bestowed by the State of Israel upon non-Jewish individuals who risked their lives during the war.
It wasn't until April 2014 that the Netherlands recognized their efforts, awarding them the War Mobilization Cross.
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