Education
Pierre initially studied to become a priest but soon joined the family business, initially running a laundry in Valkenburg near Maastricht.
Pierre initially studied to become a priest but soon joined the family business, initially running a laundry in Valkenburg near Maastricht.
He is remembered principally for his involvement in the Dutch resistance in the Second World War when he hid a considerable number of Dutchmen from the Germans and also assisted the Allies during the Dutch liberation. Under the pseudonym of Paul Simons, he headed the Valkenburg chapter. He helped Jews and resistance fighters to hide from the Germans in his laundry as well as in the nearby Valkenburg limestone caves.
Furthermore, he assisted both Dutchmen and Allies to move on by issuing them with ration books and coupons and providing them with safe addresses where they could hide.
After the war, he returned to the family business and ultimately took up weaving for which he was considered to be an expert. Pierre Schunck was awarded the Resistance Cross for his bravery during the occupation.
From the beginning of the German occupation, he decided to stand up against the Germans and became a member of the Liaison Office or Landelijke Organisatie voor hulp aan Onderduikers, a resistance group whose mandate was to assist persons in hiding.
In 1944, as a member of intelligence group ID18, he provided the Allies first with reports on the German defences and later organised physical resistance.