Britain’s Royal Mail has issued a postage stamp of Noor
Inayat Khan, World War II heroine, who fought fascism and died in the
Dachau concentration camp.
The stamp — part of a set of 10 stamps in the ‘Remarkable Lives’ series — honours Noor on her centenary year
“I am that Royal Mail has commemorated Noor with a stamp,” said Shrabani Basu, author of Spy Princess, The Life of Noor Inayat Khan, and the Chair of the Noor Inayat Khan Memorial Trust. “It will ensure that her sacrifice and bravery will not be forgotten.”
Shrabani Basu campaigned for a memorial for Noor which was unveiled in November 2012 by Princess Anne.
About Noor Inayat Khan
Noor
Inayat Khan was born in Moscow in January 1914 to an Indian father,
Hazrat Inayat Khan and an American mother, Ora Ray Baker.
The couple had
met in the Ramkrishna Mission ashram in America. Hazrat Inayat Khan was
a Sufi preacher and musician, and travelled the world taking Sufism to
the West.
Noor was brought up in Paris and the family
moved to London when Paris was occupied by the Germans in 1940 during
WW II.
Noor joined the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force and was later
recruited for the Special Operations Executive, a secret organisation
started by Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
She was
the first woman radio operator to be flown undercover to Paris. She
worked from there for three months under the code name Madeleine.
However she was betrayed, arrested and finally executed in the Dachau
concentration camp in Germany.
Though she was
tortured and interrogated, she revealed nothing, not even her real name.
Her last word as they shot her was “Liberte”! She was only 30.
Noor was awarded the highest honour, the George Cross, by Britain. France awarded her the Croix de Guerre.
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