Alice
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Walberg, 18, Brussels.
Note, there's like three St.
Walbergs
All different, like place, boulevard, rue, those are different, but the main word is the same.
And then the number is off by just a little, 17, 18, 2, which is interesting.
Like, is that close to maybe something that is home to her?
It might not be her actual home, but maybe that address actually means something for her to be able to remember it.
And then she continues to use different aliases, as Lisbeth tells us.
I know I'm butchering all of these.
I'm so sorry to our friends who actually know how to say these things.
Vera Jarrell was born in Antwerp.
And there's a Brussels address form that's lost in that instance.
She uses another name, Fenella Lorik, a Brussels address form that's also lost.
And then an Elisabeth Lienhauer, which is often misspelled, born in Ostend, living at Philip Stockstra 44A, Brussels.
Elisabeth says,
That feels deliberate.
Either Belgium was an operational base or it was a familiar identity shell she repeatedly relied on.
Now the linguistic angle is interesting.
By 1970, cities like Ghent and Leuven were firmly Dutch-speaking in official street usage.
Leuven had switched decades earlier and Ghent underwent active Dutchification of street names in the 1960s.