Witte Brigade
| De Geuzengroep (1940-1944) Witte Brigade-Fidelio (1944) | |
|---|---|
Insignia of the Witte Brigade-Fidelio, displaying both the group's initials, but also a V for Victory | |
| Leaders | Marcel Louette Edward Gierek |
| Dates of operation | 1940-September 1944 |
| Active regions | Focused on Antwerp region, Belgium |
| Opponents | German Occupying Forces |
The White Brigade (Dutch: Witte Brigade, French: Brigade blanche) was a Belgian resistance group founded on 23 July 1940 in Antwerp by Marcel Louette, who was nicknamed "Fidelio". The group was originally known as "De Geuzengroep" and changed its name again after the Liberation of Belgium to Witte Brigade-Fidelio as the term "white brigade" had emerged as a generic term to describe the resistance.
The name was chosen in opposition to the "Black Brigade", a collaborator group led by SS-Untersturmführer Reimond Tollenaere, who was responsible for the propaganda of pro-German Flemish National League. The Witte Brigade was based in Antwerp but had smaller branches in Gent, Lier, Aalst, Brussels, Waasland, Wallonia and in the coastal region.