Though not as well known as other courageous young resistance fighters like Sophie Scholl, Freddie Oversteegen and her sister, Truus, were pivotal forces in the anti-SS movement and heroines of the Dutch Resistance during WWII. Through a combination of human passion and meticulous strategy, they succeeded in luring countless members of the SS to their ends – and they did their most important work as teenagers.

When Freddie and her sister were 14 and 16 years old, respectively, a member of the resistance visited their family home to ask their mother (who was also involved in the movement) for her permission to let her daughters join the cause, and the rest is history. As Vice put it, the Oversteegen sisters, along with their more famous colleague, Hannie Schaft, "would flirt with German collaborators under false pretenses and then lead them into the woods, where instead of a make-out session, the men would be greeted with a bullet."

Read on to find out more about the Dutch Resistance's extraordinary anti-fascist youth movement, and about this extraordinary teenager who seduced and took down WWII German soldiers.