Rita Arnould

Rita Arnould (c.1914 – 20 August 1943) was a housekeeper and courier of the Red Orchestra resistance group in Belgium during World War II. She was captured when the Germans found her in a house from which clandestine radio messages were being sent. The information she gave led to collapse of the network. She was later executed.

Rita Arnould
Bornc.1914[lower-alpha 1]
Died20 August 1943
Plötzensee Prison, Berlin, Germany
NationalityGerman
OccupationHousekeeper

Early years

Rita Arnould was born in Frankfurt am Main to a Jewish family. She studied philosophy at Frankfurt am Main University, where she became the companion of Isidor Springer. He convinced her to become a Communist activist. In 1933 the couple moved to Brussels[lower-alpha 2] after Hitler had seized power, since it was now dangerous in Germany to be either a Jew or Communist. Soon after reaching Brussels she married a M. Arnould, a well-to-do Dutch textile salesman who was over twice her age, and settled into a domestic routine.[3]

During World War II (1939–45) the Germans invaded Belgium in May 1940. Rita's husband died soon after, leaving her with no money. She asked Isidor Springer to help. He was now making a good living selling diamonds, and had a Belgian wife. Springer established her as his mistress at 101 Rue des Atrébates, where she worked as a housekeeper and courier for two agents who called themselves Carlos Alamo and Anna Verlinden.[3]

Capture

The Germans detected radio transmissions from the house and a group led by Abwehr Captain Harry Piepe raided it in the small hours of the night of 12–13 December 1941.[2] A man burst from the house but was caught and brought back. Inside the house they found Rita, a woman agent, and a radio transmitter that was still warm. The woman was trying to burn enciphered messages, which the Germans recovered.[3] The man was a radio operator named Anton Danilov, probably an alias of David Kamy.[2] The Germans found a hidden room holding the material and equipment needed to produce forged documents, including blank passports, forms, inks and rubber stamps. Rita was terrified and told Captain Piepe what she knew.[3] There were two passports with pictures which Rita identified as the head of all the Soviet espionage groups in Europe and his deputy in Belgium.[1] The next day Mikail Makarov, who had been using the alias Carlos Alamo and was also a radio operator, came to the house and was also arrested.[4]

Aftermath

Rita was 27 years old when she was arrested.[1] Her information led to discovery of others in the network and the collapse of the Rote Kapelle (Red Orchestra) network.[5][lower-alpha 3] During later interrogations Rita gave information that led to the German discovery of the Soviet agents' cypher.[7] The Germans had omitted to take the books that were lying on the table, and a member of the spy network later removed them. When the Germans realized that the cypher was a book code, they coached Rita to remember the titles. With difficulty, she recalled the title Le Miracle du Professeur Wolmar, an obscure 1910 novel. This turned out to be the key.[8] The book was not located until May 1942, when a copy was found in an antiquarian bookshop in Paris. Using it, about 120 intercepted messages from June 1941 onward were deciphered, including a message with the addresses of key Soviet agents in Berlin.[9]

Springer managed to avoid arrest and moved to Lyon in France, where he resumed his clandestine work. The head of the ring, Victor Guryevitch, also escaped. The woman taken with Rita was a Polish Jew named Zofia Poznańska (Zosia) who had been trained in cyphering in Moscow before the war.[10] She refused to collaborate and killed herself in St. Gilles Prison in Brussels on 29 September 1942.[10][5] Makarov was tried before the Kriegsgerichtshof (the army's military court), sentenced to death and executed in 1942 at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin.[11] David Kamy was tried by a German military court in Belgium, sentenced to death and executed at Fort Breendonk on 30 April 1943.[5] Arnould was taken to Berlin-Moabit prison. She was tried by the Berlin Kriegsgerichtshof in April 1943, sentenced to death, and executed on 20 August 1943 at Plötzensee Prison.[5][lower-alpha 4]

Notes

  1. Rita was 27 when arrested at the end of 1941, which would give a birth date around 1914.[1]
  2. Another source says Rita fled to Belgium from Düsseldorf.[2]
  3. The term "Red Orchestra" was coined by the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA), the counter-espionage arm of the SS, which referred to resistance radio operators as "pianists", their transmitters as "pianos", and their supervisors as "conductors".[6]
  4. There are varied accounts of the end of Rita's life. One book says that she and Mikhail Makarov were taken to Gestapo HQ for interrogation. She heard Makarov being tortured, agreed to tell everything she knew, but was executed a few weeks later.[12] Another book says she was taken to a small hotel (again by the Gestapo), placed in a comfortable room under guard, and treated kindly while she was questioned. After some weeks, when they thought she had no more to say, she was raped by a group of Gestapo agents, then dragged naked to the rear courtyard and decapitated.[13] The account given above seems more plausible.
  1. Höhne 1968, p. 105.
  2. Tyas 2017, PT85.
  3. Tarrant 1995.
  4. Tyas 2017, PT75.
  5. Tyas 2017, PT88.
  6. Richelson 1995, p. 126.
  7. Brysac 2002, PT268.
  8. Höhne 1968, p. 108.
  9. Rau 2012.
  10. West 2007, p. 53.
  11. Tyas 2017, PT87–88.
  12. Crowdy 2011, p. 306.
  13. Nash 1997, p. 484.

Sources

  • Brysac, Shareen Blair (2002-05-23), Resisting Hitler: Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-992388-5, retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Crowdy, Terry (2011-12-20), The Enemy Within: A History of Spies, Spymasters and Espionage, Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN 978-1-78096-243-6, retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Höhne, Heinz (10 June 1968), "ptx ruft moskau", Der Spiegel (in German), retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Nash, Jay Robert (1997-10-28), Spies: A Narrative Encyclopedia of Dirty Tricks and Double Dealing from Biblical Times to Today, M. Evans, ISBN 978-1-4617-4770-3, retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Rau, Peter (21 December 2012), "Ein legendäres Orchester", Die Linke (in German), retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Richelson, Jeffrey (1995), A Century of Spies: Intelligence in the Twentieth Century, Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-511390-X
  • Tarrant, V.E. (1995), The Red Orchestra, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-13439-2, retrieved 2017-11-26
  • Tyas, Stephen (2017-06-25), SS-Major Horst Kopkow: From the Gestapo to British Intelligence, Fonthill Media, GGKEY:JT39J4WQW30, retrieved 2017-11-26
  • West, Nigel (2007-11-12), Historical Dictionary of World War II Intelligence, Scarecrow Press, ISBN 978-0-8108-6421-4, retrieved 2017-11-26
gollark: But *persecuting* individuals instead of just being broken and failing them... well, there are probably examples, I just don't know how exactly to find them.
gollark: Well, "it starves people" is obvious and well-documented.
gollark: I have no idea where to look up specifically "people for whom communism has been bad".
gollark: Your meme is basically "rhetoric" too.
gollark: Ah yes, because that is always true and accurate and nobody has EVER been hurt by "communism"!
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