Hélène Moszkiewiez published her memoirs, 'Inside the Gestapo: A Jewish Woman's Secret War' (aka 'Ma Guerre dans la Gestapo' (France)) in 1985. Apparnently, this is the only book ever written by Hélène Moszkiewiez.
This tele-movie's closing epilogue states: "Hélène Moszkiewiez emigrated to Canada where she now lives."
Whilst working for the Belgian Resistance against the Germans during the Second World War, 'Helene Moszkiewiez' held identities in three nationalities: Belgian, Jewish, and German.
In an interview with Geoffrey Molyneux of 'The Province' in 1985, Hélène Moszkiewiez said (of the Nazi Germans): "They were so stupid. They thought only in caricatures. You know, the Jewish man with a long black beard and a large hooked nose. Many of the Gestapo were the dregs. They were just there because they were cruel. The Abwehr intelligence men, now they were bright and you had to be careful when they were around . . . We heard about the camps from the BBC but so many Jews seemed to think it couldn't happen to them. You know, it could happen again. Jews have to be ready to fight."
Hélène Moszkiewiez was nineteen years old when Nazi Germany occupied Belgium. She was twenty-three years old when World War II started in 1939. These are approximately the ages of her character in this tele-movie played by Martha Plimpton.