When you volunteered for the German Army in 1941. When you volunteered into the German Army
you had a pick of what branch of the Army you wanted to go to. They didn’t guarantee that – but that’s
what they tell you.
So I picked tanks. If you were a volunteer, instead of going six months in the werke organization, you
went only three months in the werke organization.
1
So I went to the werke organization from Fall 1941
to December and I was in Jarocin which is part of Poland today. I drove home with two weeks
vacation. I received my draft notice and I went to Mödling, a suburb of Vienna, where I had basic
training with the Panzer Eins (Panzer Mk I). I had infantry training – everybody had to have infantry
training: rifle and all this kind of stuff. The German army looked for people who might make officers.
So they asked me if I would want to become an officer at the end of the training period. There was a
question if I wanted to be a professional officer or a reserve officer. They always said, “Well, if you
want to be an officer, you want to be a professional officer.” But my father told me long time ago:
“Don’t you EVER become a professional soldier” (laughter).
I went from there to the Eastern Front, the Center Section. I had about seven battle days; that means
seven days where you were really engaged with the enemy. I was in a Panzer Drei (Panzer Mk. III).
And then they took me out of the front and moved me to a place called Wundsdorf – that is a suburb of
Berlin. It had a big school of armor where all the people of the Armor Forces undergo officers’ training
for three months. That was in 1942.
In Spring of 1943, I went back to the front and that was the time of the Kursk offensive and I was in the
Panzer Drei.
2
And when we were put out there, I got sick – I had typhus. I spent a long time in the
hospital. Then in 1944, I was transferred from the Panzer units to the Panzerjager units because the
Army was transforming from the PAKS, an anti-tank gun with wheels, to the “saukopfs”.
3
All the
panzerjagers were then assault guns with the PAK 40, which you probably have seen pictures of with
the long gun.
4
So in 1944, I joined a unit as a teaching officer. I went to the front and we got beat badly. I got
wounded and I got out and I went back to Germany and stayed a couple of weeks in the hospital. For a
while, I was an officer standing around nothing to do. They transferred me. They flew by Ju-52 into the
kessel (pocket), the surrounded areas, of Kurland.
5
It was Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. I fought with a
Panzerjager unit until May 1945. I surrendered to the Russians and then I was a prisoner of war until
1948 in Russia. Then I returned to East Germany, enjoyed the Russians from all ends, including as
occupying forces. Before the Wall went up, the Russians tried to draft me so I took a powder (audience
laughter). I lived a year in Munich. My then girlfriend, now wife, was in the United States. She lived in
Monroe (Michigan). “I’ll help you come over here” So she helped me and I came over here, a bona fide
political refugee. I was here a week and I started working and have been working ever since. Now, I
don’t work any more.
I have the standard decorations. I was wounded four times. But otherwise I was not a great hero. If
you’re looking for a hero, this is the wrong place to look. I was a survivor! That’s what counts! So if
there are any questions…