From National Public Radio

Noor Inayat Khan, one of the heroines of World War II, had a short, astonishing life, one that took her from a pacifist childhood to a daring career in covert operations. She was an Indian-American Muslim woman who worked as a British spy — a radio operator — in Nazi-occupied Paris.

A new docudrama about her, Enemy of the Reich: The Noor Inayat Khan Story, premieres Tuesday on PBS.

Alex Kronemer, executive producer of the film, calls Inayat Khan “a very unlikely British agent” — in part because of her spiritual background. Born in Moscow in 1914, Inayat-Khan was the daughter of an American mother and an Indian father. Her father, a Sufi Muslim who preached tolerance and believed all religions were one, raised his daughter as a pacifist.

“A woman who grew up raised not to lie, raised to be a pacifist — and yet here she was doing one of the most dangerous missions in the war and doing it when many people backed away,” Kronemer tells NPR’s Arun Rath.

Listen to NPR Story Below:

