European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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Now you didn’t always know how somebody thought in 1940 or 42, who had been imprisoned in 1934/35/36.
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You did notice and in time you had contact to the political ones.
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We were all political prisoners.
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We had made sure of no others joining us.
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That was important - even there.
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The training: We did not have a pass. Later on, in Belgium, we did.
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There was always a corporal walking along with us (with 3 or 5 men)
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who had to make sure that no one started to talk to other people.
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But, in Belgium – as we were not the first ones there –
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they knew that in this punishment battalion 999 there were many political prisoners.
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That was known.
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After that we went to France and to Italy, as well.
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Military service, murder of a bible scholar
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I had already been mustered in Aschendorfer Moor.
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There we got an army exclusion certificate; we were unworthy for the army.
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Convicts and political prisoners were all unworthy for the army.
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In 1941/42 we were mustered again,
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due to the massive losses at the eastern front.
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They needed human material now.
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There may have been a decree of the ‘Fuehrer’– so we were called up.
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