European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
- 
where, again, where progressive Americans helped us with the information.
 - 
Anyway, some political and cultural life started.
 - 
The Americans filmed ‘Buchenwald’,
 - 
the heaps of dead bodies they found and the circumstances.
 - 
These films were shown in the USA and then all the prisoners of war had to watch these films.
 - 
Now to my release: We were transported to Belgium.
 - 
There the conditions were the same as in Aliceville, where we were taken in the first prison camp.
 - 
Just before I was released the documents came.
 - 
And there an associate, Fritz Fiedkau, was declared (in the documents) to be an SS-man.
 - 
So, in the camp, where he had been before they changed his documents in the assessment
 - 
they made the antifascist into an SS-man.
 - 
And an SS-man had already gone home as an antifascist!
 - 
I did report that later on.
 - 
We went over to Munsterlager which had the same pattern;
 - 
corporals, sergeants and so on, they were in command there.
 - 
“Don’t let yourself get released towards the east!”
 - 
In October 1946 I got on a transport to West-Berlin.
 - 
This is how I got home from war captivity.
 - 
My parents lived somewhere else, as they had been bombed out.
 - 
And now the new life began after all these incidents that you experienced over the years.
 
Il n’a plus de segments à afficher.
Chargement d’autres segments en cours…
© 2009-2025 WebTranslateIt Software S.L. Tous droits réservés.
Termes d’utilisation
·
Politique de confidentialité
·
Politique de sécurité