Gabrielle Petit - Brussels, Belgium
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Marine Biologist
N 50° 50.675 E 004° 21.180
31U E 595254 N 5633414
This statue of Gabrielle Petit is located at Place Saint-Jean in Brussels, Belgium.
Waymark Code: WMM5Z1
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Date Posted: 07/27/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 8

ABOUT THE STATUE:

This life-size bronze statue of Gabrielle Petit was created in 1923 by sculptor E. Rombaux. It rests on a concrete base. The statue depicts Petit in an ankle-length dress and a long cape. Her right hand is clenched in a fist at her side. Her left arm is bent at the elbow and folded across her chest. Her head is turned to the right and she appears to be staring into the distance.

The inscription on the base of the statue reads:

A
GABRIELLE PETIT
FUSILLÉE
PAR LES ALLEMANDS
LE 1ER AVRIL 1916
ET A MEMOIRE
DES FEMMES BELGES
MORTES POUR LA PATRIE

JE VIENS
D’ÊTRE CONDAMNÉE
A MORT
JE SERAI FUSILLÉE DEMAIN
VIVE LE ROI
VIVE LA BELGIQUE

« …ET
JE LEUR MONTRERAI
COMMENT
UNE FEMME BELGE
SAIT MOURIR »

CE MONUMENT A ETE ERIGE
PAR SOUSCRIPTION NATIONALE
A L’INITIATIVE DE LA LIGUE
DES PATRIOTES

[English Translation]:

To Gabrielle Petit, Shot by the Germans, 1 April 1916, and to the memory of all Belgian women who died for the country.

I have just been condemned to death. I will be shot tomorrow. Long live the King. Long live Belgium.

« . . . and I will show them that a Belgian woman knows how to die»

This monument was erected by national subscription at the initiative of the League of Patriots.

ABOUT THE PERSON:

"Gabrielle Alina Eugenia Maria Petit (20 February 1893 – 1 April 1916) was a Belgian woman who spied for the British Secret Service during World War I. Executed in 1916, she became a Belgian national heroine after the war's end.

Life

Petit was born on 20 February 1893 in Tournai to working class parents. She was raised in a Catholic boarding school in Brugelette following her mother's early death. At the outbreak of the First World War, she was living Brussels as a saleswoman. She immediately volunteered to serve with the Belgian Red Cross.

Petit's espionage activities began in 1914, when she helped her wounded soldier fiancé, Maurice Gobert, cross the border to the Netherlands to reunite with his regiment. She passed along to British Intelligence information about the Imperial German army acquired during the trip. The British soon hired her, gave her brief training, and sent her to spy on the enemy. She proceeded to collect information about enemy troop movements using a number of false identities. She was also an active distributor of the clandestine newspaper La Libre Belgique and assisted the underground mail service "Mot du Soldat". She helped several more young men across the Dutch border.

Petit was betrayed by a German who represented himself as Dutch. She was arrested by the German military in February 1916. She was imprisoned at the Prison de St. Gilles (a suburb of Brussels), tried, and convicted for espionage, with the death sentence imposed on the following 1 March. During her trial, Petit refused to reveal the identities of her fellow agents, despite offers of amnesty. Among such agents, Germaine Gabrielle Anna Scaron, 23 years of age, daughter of a local magistrate, and a close friend of Mlle Petit, was arrested with her on similar charges, imprisoned but spared and, despite the opposition of German military, released later for lack of sufficient evidence, which Petit could have divulged but heroically kept secret.

On 1 April 1916, Gabrielle Petit was, at the insistence of German military, shot by a firing squad at the Tir national execution field in Schaerbeek. Her body was buried on the grounds there.

Legacy

Petit's story remained unknown until after the war, when she began to be seen as a martyr for the nation. In May 1919 a state funeral was held for her, attended by Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, Cardinal Mercier of Brussels and Prime Minister Léon Delacroix, after which her remains (and those of fellow agents A. Bodson and A. Smekens) were buried with full military honors at Schaerbeek Cemetery.

A statue of Petit was erected in Brussels. In her native Tournai, a square was named after her. Several books were written and films were made about her life after the war. The reference to Germaine Scaron stems from this commentator's family oral history. Scaron was but one of Petit's many acquaintances gathered during the two years of her active life as a British spy and Belgian heroine."

--Wikipedia (visit link)
URL of the statue: [Web Link]

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