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| Berlin, 1945 No 5 Army Film & Photographic Unit, Wilkes A (Sergeant) |
When World War II was in its final stages in Europe, my father dropped out of high school in order to join the Army and get overseas, where both his brothers were. My Uncle Louis was in the Pacific, my Uncle Charlie was in Europe. Uncle Louis was in the Army Air Force, my Uncle Charlie was in the infantry, 63rd Infantry Division.
The war ended before my Dad could get overseas, but that's where he went once he was done training. He was assigned to occupation duty in Berlin.
Dad had a lot of pictures of the ruins of that once great city, much like that above. The city and the aftermath of the war made quite an impression on a 17 year old kid, away from home for the first time. He spent three years in Berlin, he must have had a great time given the amount of trouble he got into with the Army!
But for a couple of really good sergeants I had in my youth, I might have made similar mistakes as my Dad did. Those guys kept me on the straight and narrow.
I have a special connection with Germany and the Germans. Probably because of my father. I learned German in high school and seemed to have a natural aptitude for the language. A lot of folks think I am of German descent because of that and my affinity for Germany. But nope, not a drop of German blood do I have.
I lived there for seven and a half glorious years. Not at some big American base where you were isolated from the culture. I was in NATO. Most of the people I worked with every day were German. My neighbors were, with two exceptions, German. We got along well. We lived in a small village near the Dutch border, a lovely place. My favorite officer in my entire time in the Air Force was a Luftwaffe Oberstleutnant², Gerd Bauer. A fine man.
At any rate, Berlin is also in my blood, so to speak. While that remains true, I never got there in my time in Germany. You might ask why? Well, I was waiting for my parents to come over to Germany so I could show Dad the new city. But they never made it over³, so I didn't go. I did get the opportunity to meet a real Berlin couple one New Year's Eve, but that's a story for another time. So I've met real Berliners. (Note, it's just Berliner, not "a Berliner," which is a type of jelly donut⁴.)
Lately I've been reading up on the last days of the Third Reich. I am very familiar with the Western Front at this time, a little (perhaps a lot) less familiar with the Eastern Front. In the East the Germans were essentially retreating and had been retreating since Stalingrad. Russia was always a nasty front from the very beginning all the way up to the end. (Watch Downfall for a taste of the end.)
At any rate, I feel a story coming on. Not sure when it will start but it will be near the end of the war and involve the events leading up to and probably including the fall of Berlin and the aftermath of that event.
Nasty times, hope I can do them justice. (And hopefully this isn't another false start.) Anyhoo, here's a good Mark Felton video of the Battle of the Seelow Heights. The last battle before the Soviets got to Berlin. A scene setter if you will ...
¹ Berlin remains Berlin. Not sure how true this is today with the ongoing invasion of Europe by non-Europeans, but it was true for a long time. Even under the Soviets and their flunkies.
² Lieutenant Colonel
³ My mother doesn't like to fly. Long story there, probably not worth telling. Kinda irks me to this day.
⁴ The President, in a speech in Berlin, stated, "Ich bin ein Berliner." What he was saying at this early point in the Cold War is that he was a man of Berlin. Linguistically he should have said, "Ich bin Berliner." No need for the "a" in that sentence, which changes the meaning a lot. The Germans found (and still find) that malaprop amusing, but they knew what the President was trying to say and respected him for that.

My grandfather on my mother's side fought for Hitler. Captured by the Russians and put on a train to siberia. Escaped through the train window. Walked by night into Switzerland and bought his way to usa. Kent in Michigan
ReplyDeleteMany of those who went to Siberia never returned.
DeleteMy grandfather on my father's side fought for the usa. Both men became related with the marriage of my parents in a small farming town Glad win Michigan. They did not like each and never spoke except once at the marriage ceremony. Kent. mi.
ReplyDeleteI understand that very well.
DeleteA man in my dad's American Legion Post was a pilot in WWII. Flew the Ju-52. He loved the double take.
ReplyDeleteI can well imagine that!
DeleteThe Eastern Front was full of blood and hate from the get-go, a battle between two twisted ideologies. Oh no, Mark Felton video.......must....not....watch.....must....resist.....
ReplyDeleteFor the Nazis the Slavs weren't much better than the Jews and they treated the conquered areas in that manner. Aruguably, if they had treated the non-Russians better they would have had a lot more native help to defeat Stalin. For the Soviets, let's just say payback is a female dog.
DeleteNylon12 - A battle of ideologies, always nasty.
DeleteAny Mouse @ 5:58 AM - The Ukrainians welcomed the Germans as liberators from Stalin. The Nazis' "racial" policies didn't care. Even still, a lot of Soviet prisoners turned their coats and fought for the Germans.
DeleteWasn't it more competing factions in the same Marxist ideology? Sure, National Socialism had a white wash of private ownership of business, but owners danced to the State's kettle of drummers.
DeleteSame secret police.
Same habit of making enemies disappear.
Same encouraging informing on friends and family.
Not a clipped groats's worth of difference between the two.
Actually Nazism had nothing to do with Marxist ideology. Both were simply excuses for dictators to do whatever they wanted. They had a deep hatred for each other.
DeleteMarxism is a retarded, uneducated fantasy of economics, Nazism is an infantile power trip based on racism and nationalism. My own simplistic (at best) explanation of the two "systems." Marx was a failure who thought he had the answers, Lenin, Stalin, and Mao used that to pervert and twist the masses. Hitler used National Socialism for his own purposes. One of Nazism's biggest "philosophers" was a fellow by the name of Alfred Rosenberg, Hitler ignored him for the most part. Himmler had all sorts of racist fantasies, Hitler largely ignored him as well.
Both were and remain tools used to subjugate people and concentrate power in an "elite." Similar, not really.
Sarge, very much looking forward to your story!
ReplyDeleteI’m sure it will be excellent.
juvat
We shall see!
DeleteSarge, we share an interest in high school German (Which I also took for four years. I actually still used some of it when I traveled earlier this year to Germany. My teacher Frau G. would be happy).
ReplyDeleteI have also been interested of late for reasons I am not fully cognizant of in the last days of the Third Reich. There are some interesting short movies or clips from others on The Tube Of You (sadly, not a lot of movies like Downfall, which was excellent).
The failure of societies hangs heavily on my mind these days.
Your last rings true for me as well.
DeleteTHBB,
DeleteSure does seem like there's a lot of Hitler wannabes in power in Governments around the world doesn't it. Even the UK's PM seems to be tilting a little that way. And....NO...In spite of what the Main Stream Media publishes, I don't believe the President is among them. He's human and makes a mistake sometimes, But not Evil.
My opiniion, your's may vary.
juvat
Every government on the planet has those who think they know better than anyone else. All of them. Those who seek power are the last people you want in government. Yet it attracts them like flies to shite.
DeleteDang it Sarge, now I'm craving a jelly donut! - Tuna
ReplyDeleteMe too!
DeleteRaspberry Bismarcks Rule!
DeleteI can always count on you to go completely off topic.
DeleteThe Fall of Berlin was horrific. That anyone of German origin survived the rape and pillage and loot and burn was amazing. There's something stoic about the German character that has allowed them to survive such horrors for millenia.
ReplyDeleteI prefer the Miracle from the Air in 1948. The Berlin Airlift was truly a miracle. Went from making a gesture to actually feeding and rebuilding a whole half-city. And the things that came out of it, like modern air traffic control, still are valid. Wonderful 'end' to the war, no?
The overrunning of all of eastern Germany was as well. Berlin gets the most press, much as New Orleans did after Katrina.
DeleteNever had a chance to see Berlin while stationed in Germany. My job was on the list that forbid overland travel through East Germany; only by air. To be accurate, my job wasn't important. Anyone who has served know nothing needs to make sense.
ReplyDeleteThe less sense it makes the better, or so it seems at times.
DeleteColonel Bauer is the man who sent you home when your cat died, isn't he? I approve of him.
ReplyDeleteYou are a accomplished teller of tales, I am looking forward to you next story.
Yes, the very one. A fine officer and an outstanding human being.
DeleteGot to see Berlin on a whim before out last tour was finished. Well worth it.
ReplyDeleteI'm currently reading Traudel Junge's book. The movie "Downfall" was excellent - and good German practice.
Looking forward to whatever you produce, Sarge!
Boat Guy
I try not to look too much at the subtitles, but my German is very rusty!
Delete