The special story of Dutch teenagers who seduced and killed the Nazis

During World War II, the Nazi conquest of the Netherlands turned three teenage girls into warriors and resistance against the Nazis. Truus Oversetegen, Freddie Overseagen and Hannie Schaft will always be reminded of the interesting technique that lured their assistants “into the forest and executed them. The beginning of this story is this: Hannie [...]
During World War II, the Nazi conquest of the Netherlands turned three teenage girls into warriors and resistance against the Nazis.
Truus Oversetegen, Freddie Overseagen and Hannie Schaft will always be reminded of the interesting technique that lured their assistants “into the forest and executed them.
The beginning of this story is this: Hannie was 19 years old, Truus 16 and Fredie only 14 years old when Nazi Germany seized the Netherlands on May 10, 1940. During World War II, the Nazis occupied the Netherlands and turned three teenage girls into strong, resistant warriors.
Still 80 years later, their daughters are telling the story of three teenagers.
The two Freddie sisters and Truus Oversettegen were raised by a mother of a widow with anti-fascist conviction.
Their friend Hannie Schaft was a university student who abandoned her after refusing to become a playboy to Germany.
When the occupation began, the girls became together and began performing certain tasks for the prosperity of resistance, but soon their role became more active by engaging in direct shares.
Liesbeth van der Horst, director of the Dutch Resistance Museum, said it is extraordinary for young girls to get involved in military resistance and especially execute traitors like these girls did.
Girls' family members Oversetegen said that the girls' resistance began in 1942 by executing a girl who believed she wanted to deliver the names of the Haarlem Jews to the Nazi intelligence service. When Fredie asked about the girl's name to confirm that it was she shot him and left him dead.
Using youth and innocence on their face, they invented a technique, special bait to send Danish traitors to the forest, making them believe that the girls were flirting with them and that before they offered out for kisses, they were executed. But that was not the only way. They shot many victims while riding a bicycle, and they did not often do this just through flirting.
But fate did not smile at Hannie Schfat, who became known by the Nazis through the red hair that was caught and executed on April 17, 1945, at the age of 24, and only 18 days later, the Netherlands was released.
As Sisters Oversetegen survived the war and lived for a long time, one until 2016 and the other in 2018.












