
The sisters in the photo are famous ruthless people in the Netherlands during World War II, and it is said that they have killed dozens of German Nazi soldiers together, but the means are well, hehe, somewhat out of the ordinary.
One of the sisters is called Freddy and the other is Called Turus, they are sisters, and their surnames are more awkward, about Ofstigen or something. When the Germans hit the Netherlands, they were fifteen or sixteen years old, and the sisters, under the influence of their mother, had a bitter hatred for the invaders, did a lot of good things like sheltering Jews, and occasionally went out to hand out anti-Nazi pamphlets or something.
The sisters' behavior soon attracted the attention of the Resistance, and after a period of investigation to determine that they were not Nazi spies, the Resistance took them in, often going out to do some work to blow up bridges or railways. However, soon such a job could not satisfy the ambitious sisters, they felt that it was more angry to kill the Nazi soldiers, but the teenage girls and professional soldiers were obviously not successful, so they thought of a relatively unlimited trick.
The older sister would act as bait, and she would often go to the bar in the evening to chat with the Nazi soldiers, and after a worshipful performance, the sister would invite the German soldiers to the nearby woods for a "walk". At this time, most of the German soldiers would have sperm on their brains, and their IQ dropped to negative numbers, and they could not imagine that they were already facing a killing machine. After the woods, the sister ambushed with a gun, and the German soldier who was hooked disappeared into the dense forest, which seemed simple but very effective, and the sisters were very clever, using the tactic of shooting one shot for another place, so until the end of the war, the German army did not suspect that they had committed the crime.
After the war, the sisters became one of the few fig leaf in the Netherlands, becoming international righteous and national heroes, and both sisters lived a relatively long life, one died in 2016 at the age of 92, and the other died in 2018 at the age of 93. Throughout their long lives, the Netherlands failed to properly recognize the achievements of women and to see them as communists. In 2014, they finally gained state recognition by accepting the Mobilisati-Oorlogskruis or WarMobilisati-Oorlogskruis.