Donald Caskie (1902-1983). Image source
Caskie was appointed as Minister in the Scots Kirk in Paris in the mid-1930s. He left the city when it was occupied by the Nazis in June 1940. He moved to Marseille and became part of an underground escape route that was organised by British intelligence.
They helped to hide stranded Allied servicemen and women and arrange their escape from France (usually over the Pyrenees to neutral Spain). He wrote about his wartime experiences in the book, The Tartan Pimpernel, which was published in 1957. It is a truly remarkable story of courage.
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