
08/05/2025
🧶 The Spy Who Hid Secrets in Her Knitting
During World War I, a Belgian woman named Madame Levengle lived across from a train station used by the Germans. But she wasn’t just a neighbor — she was a spy.
As soldiers marched, she sat by her window… knitting.
But hidden in her stitches were coded messages — using a system where certain types of stitches represented letters. She passed military intel through innocent-looking scarves and socks. One dropped stitch could cost lives.
She helped the Allies track enemy movements — all with nothing but needles and courage.
A quiet rebellion woven into yarn.
💬 Would you have spotted the spy?
🔔 Follow Haley Wong for more stories of hidden heroes and forgotten brilliance from history!