Vecht died in 1915, aged 33 years, when she was fatally injured by shrapnel at Veurne in
West Flanders, while saying goodbye before a planned evacuation. She died after an operation to amputate her leg at
De Panne. She was the only known Dutch nurse to die during World War I. Her remains were buried with military honours at
Adinkerke Military Cemetery, and reinterred in 1920, in the Jewish cemetery in
Muiderberg. In 2015, to mark the 100th anniversary of her death, Vecht was remembered in a ceremony at the
Menin Gate in
Ypres. ==References==