Chetta Chevalier

Chetta Chevalier, born Henrietta Scerri (2 April 1901 7 September 1973), a Maltese woman of British nationality resident in Rome, was a critical node in Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty's "Rome Escape Line" network operating in the Vatican during World War Two. Her third-floor flat on the Via Imperia was used as a depot for supplies, and to lodge escapees fleeing the Fascist regimes of Europe. She was known within the organization as "Mrs. M." The provenance of her nom de guerre whether this was a reference to her home island of Malta, her mother's maiden name, or another factor — is unknown.

Chetta Chevalier
Born
Henrietta Scerri

2 April 1901
Sliema, Northern Harbour, Malta
Died3 September 1973 (aged 72)
NationalityBritish
OccupationSpy
Nurse
Housewife

Life

Chevalier was born to Emmanuel Scerri and his wife Maria née Mamo in Sliema, Northern Harbour District, Malta. She married Thomas Chevalier on 15 May 1920 at the church of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart in Sliema. The couple lived in Rome, where Mr. Chevalier worked as an agent for British travel company Thomas Cook & Sons, and had several children. After the death of her husband and the imprisonment of one of her sons in 1939, the British widow found herself stuck in Mussolini's fascist state and responsible for the welfare of her children and elderly mother. Recruited into O'Flaherty's network, Chevalier essentially gave O'Flaherty carte blanche to use her apartment as a storehouse and safehouse for people fleeing fascism. Despite several close scrapes — including one which one of her daughters, Gemma, hid from Chevalier — and being under constant surveillance by Hitler's Sicherheitsdienst, Chevalier and her family continued their clandestine activities under constant risk of death until being evacuated by O'Flaherty's network one by one to a farm on the outskirts of the city where they lived out the rest of the war in hiding themselves.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

She was awarded a British Empire Medal for her extraordinary efforts to offer sanctuary to those in need. Her efforts are credited with directly offering assistance to 4,000 people during the war.[7][2][6]

Chevalier passed away on her native Malta on 7 September 1973, and is buried at the Santa Maria Addolorata Cemetery. A memorial garden has been planted in her honour at the Malta Aviation Museum and was opened on 24 November 2012. [8][2][3][6]

References

  1. Findagrave.com
  2. Debono, Charles (2014-02-09). "Maltese escape committees and the Dodecanese setback". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  3. "Henrietta Chetta Chevalier B.E.M. - Spy, Nurse, Housewife - A Tribute". WW2Talk. 2018-10-08. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  4. "Henrietta "Chetta" Chevalier (1901-1973) Find A..." Find A Grave. 1920-05-15. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  5. Goldstein, Norm (2019-07-26). "Vatican Intrigue: Priest Outwits Nazis". HistoryNet. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  6. Dalmas, Maria Rossella (2012-06-12). "An unsung hero of wartime". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  7. Malta Independent 3 Feb 2013
  8. Malta Aviation Museum: Henrietta Chevalier Memorial Garden
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