student report #2
Kurt Wittmann (Kurt.Wittmann@T-ONLINE.DE)
Tue, 6 May 1997 22:55:00 +0100
Hi everybody,
I am putting a second report written by one of my students on the listserve for
anybody who is interested or might want to use it somewhere.
I must admit the reports have been revised by me and by Tom Holloway whom I am
very grateful for the time and interest he has been putting in my students#
work. Thank you Tom.
This story was written by a 16-year-old boy by the name of Andreas Hubel living
in Nördlingen, Bavaria, Germany.
WW II in our family
This is a true story in all its details.
When in September 1939 Adolf Hitler`s troops raided Poland my family did not
mind - on the contrary : People were happy about the successful counterattack,
because everybody only believed in what the Nazi PR said.
The Nazi PR was the propaganda ministry. It defined, which information Germans
and Austrians were allowed to know and also which information the people must
not know. For example people were not allowed to know that Göring, who was an
important man in the national-socialistic regime, because he was the chief of
the air force, was obsessed with crack and other hard drugs. So it was also a
lie, that the Polish military had attacked Germany first and the Germans only
were defending their country, because when the government lies to its people,
whom could you believe then? The big majority of Germans only got to know the
real and true "news" from World War II after ten or twenty years.
Now I will get back to my family. I have already said that my grandfather, who
had just married, did not mind the "small problem" at the German-Polish border.
At first after some weeks my grandparents asked themselves, if everything was
alright and then they heard it: War had been started. But there were only
successful messages to be heard about defending the German borderline and soon
after, it almost seemed to be forgotten, but really only almost, because war
cannot easily be forgotten, my grandmother said. The following two years nothing
happened which would be worth mentioning apart from endless successful news from
the Wehrmacht (the name of the national-socialistic army) via Volksempfänger.
Volksemfänger is a kind of radio, which Germans had during that time.
So it was quiet until one day a letter arrived, which was addressed to my
grandfather. The letter said that my grandfather had to go to Windau. Windau was
a garrison for the navy for boot camp in northern Germany. My grandfather had to
stay there for two months. There he had to learn and practice shooting down
flying enemy objects. After he had applied he was allowed to go home for one day
to say "Good Bye" to his family. On 4th August 1941 he had to go the ship, whose
course was Trondheim and Narvik, two cities in Norway. There the Navy fought
against bombing aeroplanes to hold the "won" places. Two years later he had to
go to the northest point of Norway. It was Kirkenes and Nordkap, where he stayed
till the end of the war. It was impossible to hold Norway, he told me. By the
end the Wehrmacht had nothing to eat apart from some green apples and dead
horses. At first had he got holiday every third month, but after 1943 he did not
get any holiday, because losses had been very high and it was difficult to
transport the soldiers from the northest point of Norway to south Germany.
Finally he was also not allowed to write letters for home. Many buddies of my
grandfather died of hunger and very many were frozen by the deep temperatures
at the north of Norway in winter of 1944. There was nothing to see of the glory
and the success of the German army. On 9th May, a day after the German
capitulation, he was in British captivity. There he had to stay in prison. But
he got something to eat. Later he said that he was glad to be captured by the
British and not by the Russians. The Russian army treated their prisoners badly
compared to the British army. When half of his captivity was over he came to
Koblenz in Germany. In captivity he was not allowed to write letters.
My grandmother told me, that it had always been terrible not to know anything
during all the time from 1943 until 1945. My grandfather was freed on 1st
November 1945. My grandfather had two brothers, who died in WW II. One of them
was a test pilot of the new Düsentrieb-aeroplanes. In 1944 he had an crash and
fell to earth fastened in his plane, because the rescuing system did not work
well. He died in Schleißheim at the age of 30 years. Schleißheim is a part of
Munich. My grandfather`s other brother died in a hospital in France. He was shot
in his spine.
During that time my grandfather's village was bombed, but not hit directly.
American bombs fell two kilometres away from the village, but mud and stones
flew as far as the middle of the village and very many windows without
protection were destroyed. The occupation of the US-Army started at the end of
1944. They wanted to see each comer of the house. They had to look for weapons
and soldiers.
That was the Second World War in my family's eyes. By dying my grandfather's
brothers did not achieve a so-called hero-death. One of them ended miserably far
from help somewhere in France. He could not be helped anymore.