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Sons and Soldiers

Page 44

by Bruce Henderson


  Nuremberg laws, 31, 55

  percent of population, 14

  policies against, ix, 15–17, 47

  as soldiers during World War I, 26, 31, 53, 214, 378

  Jews in Vichy France, laws and actions against, 80–81

  Jones, Alan, 270

  Josbach, Germany, 26, 27, 28–29, 30, 32–33, 378–379

  Joseph, Willi, 152, 183–184

  K

  Kahn, Harry, 132

  Kann, Edgar, 293, 303, 304, 331–332

  Kathe (cousin of Martin Selling), 2, 363, 364, 365

  Katten, Arthur, 30, 31, 33, 53

  Katten, Lina, 30, 33

  Kaufman, Rose, 90

  Kauter, Heinrich, 304–306, 347

  Keffer, Frederic, 327

  Kindergarten Front, 268

  Kitchener Refugee Camp (Kent, England), 116

  Klapper, Bert, 82

  Königsberger, Leo, 68

  Korn, Anton, 308, 349

  Kristallnacht (“Night of Broken Glass”), ix, 1–2, 3, 45–46, 91

  L

  Landsberg concentration camp, 304

  Laub, Hugo, 53

  Laub, Isa, 54

  Laub, Julius, 2, 3, 4, 53, 118

  Laun, Karl, 296–298

  Lehrberg, Germany, 1, 2, 55, 363

  Lewy, Arthur

  in America, 81–82, 214

  background, 37–40

  in Nazi Germany, 42, 43–44, 47–50, 72

  Lewy, Gertrude, 37, 38, 38–39

  Lewy, Johanna, 47–49, 214

  Lewy, Stephan, 38, 41, 80

  arrival in America, 214

  at Château Chabannes in unoccupied France, 78–81

  childhood before Hitler, 37, 39–40

  childhood in Nazi Germany, 40–43, 45–47

  emigration, 48–50, 71

  escape from occupied France, 74–78

  in France with Count Monbrison, 71–74

  life after World War II, 376–377

  voyage to America, 82–84

  Lewy, Stephan, in Army, 216, 319

  Battle of the Bulge and, 318–321

  in Brittany, 215–218

  at Camp Ritchie, 214

  citizenship, 214

  contact with Russians, 351–352

  interrogation technique, 320–321

  liberation of Buchenwald, 327–331

  Nazis rounded up by, 352–355

  promotion, 215

  return to Europe, 213, 215

  Loinger, Georges, 79

  Losheim Gap, 270, 273

  Luxembourg, German occupation of, 125

  M

  Maginot Line, 72, 73

  Majdanek death camp, 370

  Mann, Erika, 88, 89

  Mann, Thomas, 88–89

  Marcuse, Jean-Pierre, 79

  Marshall, George C., 131–132

  Martha (cousin of Martin Selling), 365

  McAuliffe, Anthony, 318

  McNair, Lesley J., 228

  Meiters, Margarethe, 349–350

  Meyer, Hermann, 306, 309–310

  Middleton, Troy, 261

  Military Intelligence Training Center (MITC). See Camp Ritchie

  Monbrison, Count Hubert Conquéré de, 71–74

  Montgomery, Bernard, 235

  Murrow, Edward R., 331

  MV Georgic, 118

  N

  Nathan, Eric, 245

  Nazi Germany. See also concentration camps; Jews in Germany

  elections, 29–30

  history rewritten, 17–18

  imprisonment of opposition, 3

  invasion of Poland, 72–73, 103

  jet planes, 245

  National Socialist Party organization, 352–353

  Nuremberg Laws, 31, 55

  occupation of Rhineland, 31

  Siegfried Line, 73, 256

  V-1 rockets, “buzz bombs,” 206

  war crimes against civilians, 311, 312

  war crimes against U.S. soldiers, 277, 305–306

  youth organizations, 16–17, 30–31, 33, 47, 59

  Neuengamme system of concentration camps, 355–366

  Neumann, Heinz, 356

  Nibley, Hugh, 135

  “Night of Broken Glass” (Kristallnacht), ix, 1–2, 3, 45–46, 91

  Nijmegen bridge operation, 235–238

  Nuremberg Laws (Germany, 1935), 31, 55, 61

  O

  Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants (OSE), 71, 78, 80

  Old Men Front, 268

  101st Airborne, 175

  106th Infantry Division, 267–277, 279

  Operation Cobra, 219

  Operation Market Garden, 235, 238, 241, 245, 247–249

  Oppermann (German lieutenant), 350

  Oranienburg concentration camp, 42

  Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT), 79

  P

  Paley, Princess Irina, 71

  “A Paratrooper’s Prayer” (Wood), 242–243

  Patton, George S., Jr., 206, 216–217, 318–319

  Pétain, Philippe, 80

  Phoney War, 73, 104

  Poland, 72–73, 93–94, 185, 369–370

  Q

  Queen Mary, 213, 215, 267

  R

  Radinowsky, Else, 68

  Ramdohr, Ludwig, 356–359

  Ravensbrück women’s concentration camp, 356, 357, 358

  Red Army, contact with, 337, 338, 351–352

  Ritchie Boys. See also specific individuals

  D-Day wait, 160, 164–165, 166

  in England, 151–154, 158–160, 159, 206–207, 229, 231–233

  execution of, by Germans, 205–206, 277

  German-born, 393–408

  German Jewish refugees as, 159

  in German uniforms in England, 158, 233

  killed, 409

  nickname, 215

  overview of, xi–xii, 393–409

  percent of credible intelligence gathered by, in European Theater of Operations, xii, 393

  postwar lives, xii

  promotions, 150–151, 157, 215, 229, 284, 288

  RMS Rangitata, 149, 151, 157

  Roosevelt, Franklin, 126

  “Roosevelt’s Butchers,” 181

  Rosenbusch, Minna, 34, 96

  Rosenbusch, Morris, 34, 96

  Rundstedt, Gerd von, 273

  Rust, Melvin, 187–188, 292

  S

  Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg concentration camp, 190–191

  Saint-Lô, France, 219

  Schwartzberg, Idamae, 88

  Seale, John, 271

  Sears, Walter, 365

  Second War Powers Act (US, 1942), 129

  2nd Armored Division, “Hell on Wheels,” 152–154, 178–179, 181–182, 183, 218, 221, 251, 252

  Selling, Leopold, 4, 118

  Selling, Martin

  in Dachau, 5–10, 51–52

  emigration, 54, 55–57

  as “enemy alien” in England, 115, 116–117

  imprisonment of, 3–4

  life after World War II, 378

  life in America, 118–119

  life in Nazi Germany, 1, 2–5

  release from Dachau, 52–54

  voyage to America, 117–118

  Selling, Martin, in Army, 205, 210

  Battle of the Bulge and, 315–317

  at Camp Ritchie, 121–122, 205–206

  citizenship, 204

  enemy alien status and, 119, 120–121

  in England, 206–207

  fake nurses exchange and, 311–313

  in France, 207–213

  God, belief in, 10

  inability to exact revenge, 211

  interrogation technique, 209–213

  loyalty questioned, 313–315

  return to Europe, 204

  search for family members, 361–365

  Selling, Siegfried, 54–55

  Serpa Pinto (passenger ship), 83–84

  Siegfried Line, 73, 256, 319

  Silberberg, Benno, 19, 20–21, 22, 23, 8
6–87

  Silberberg, Ethel, 21, 86

  Silberberg, Melvin, 86

  6th Armored Division, “Super Sixth,” 213, 215, 216–217, 317, 318, 327–331, 351–352

  Solomon, Rudy, 87

  Spang, Karl, 218

  SS Hamburg, 25, 85

  SS Navemar, 1–9, 107–108

  SS New York, 94–95, 95

  SS Veendam, 124

  St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 189–190

  Stajkowski, Sigmund “Sig,” 197, 202

  Stangl, Alois, 52

  Statue of Liberty, 84, 95, 108–109

  Steinfeld, Abraham, 26–27

  Steinfeld, Herbert, “Naftali,” 27, 35, 97, 379

  Steinfeld, Irma, 27, 97, 227, 338, 379

  Steinfeld, Isador, 26

  Steinfeld, Johanna Hanschen, 27, 28–29, 30, 32–33, 35–36

  Steinfeld, Manfred, “Manny”

  childhood before Hitler, 26–29

  childhood in Nazi Germany, 29–34

  emigration of, 35

  life after World War II, 378–380

  life in America, 96–98, 227–228

  trip to Chicago, 94–96

  Steinfeld, Manfred, “Manny,” in Army, 242

  Army Specialized Training Program, 228–229

  arrest of Ramdohr, 358–360

  at Camp Ritchie, 229

  at Camp Roberts, 228

  citizenship, 228

  crossing Elbe River and contact with Russians, 334–337, 338

  dog tags, 230–231

  in England, 229

  glider mission, 240–244

  in Holland, 235–245

  jump training, 229–230

  promotions, 229

  at Wöbbelin concentration camp, 338–339, 344–345

  Steinfeld, Paula, 27–28, 33–34, 36–37, 96–97, 97, 379

  Steinfeld, Solomon, 26, 29–30, 33, 53

  Stern, Eleonore, 14, 90–94, 92

  Stern, Günther, “Guy”

  childhood before Hitler, 13, 14–15

  childhood in Nazi Germany, 15–18

  immigration to America, 21–26, 24

  life after World War II, 380–381

  life in America, 87–94, 93

  Navy and, 154

  promotion, 288

  trip to St. Louis, 85–86

  Stern, Günther “Guy,” in Army, 157, 365, 365

  assignment in Europe, 158–160

  Battle of the Bulge and, 287, 296–297

  at Buchenwald, 331–334

  at Camp Barkeley, 154–155

  at Camp Ritchie, 155–157

  citizenship, 155

  Dietrich and, 298–302

  in England, 158–159

  “German Preparations for Chemical Warfare” report, 289–290

  German railroad report, 288–289

  Laun and, 296–298

  in Normandy, 184–193

  partnership with Howard, 291–296, 298–302, 303–304

  return to Europe, 157

  search for family, 192–193, 365–371

  Stern, Hedwig, 14, 15, 18, 25, 90–94, 92

  Stern, Julius, 14, 15, 16, 18, 25, 90–94, 92

  Stern, Werner, 14–15, 90–94

  Stimson, Henry, 132

  Strauss, Lewis L., 123

  Strong, George V., 133

  Stutthof concentration camp, 363, 379

  “superior knowledge” interrogation technique, 156–157, 293

  Swanson, John, 309

  Swarsensky, Manfred, 60

  Sztrum, Marjan, 79–80, 377

  T

  Thalhimer, Morton, 124

  Thalhimer, William, 124

  35th Infantry Division, 206, 207, 310–311, 315

  Tittel, Herr, 19–20, 22, 86

  Trains of Thought: Memories of a Stateless Youth (Brombert), 376

  Treblinka death camp, 370–371

  28th Infantry Division, 254, 255–261, 263, 266, 267

  U

  United States

  as arsenal of democracy, 126

  bombing of Pearl Harbor, 111

  “de-Nazification” policy, 352–354

  German citizens as enemy aliens, xi

  German Jewish refugees’ desire to fight Nazis, x–xi

  immigration restrictions, ix–x, 18–19, 33–34

  intelligence apparatus, 131–132 See also Camp Ritchie

  isolationism, 110–111

  Second War Powers Act, 129

  United States Army, 278–286. See also Camp Ritchie; Interrogation of Prisoners of War (IPW) courses

  alien detachment, 129–130

  Ardennes training and rest area, 267

  Army Specialized Training Program, 228–229

  best interrogators, 209

  central depot at Bad Schwalbach, Germany, 361–362

  dog tags, 177, 178, 230–231

  82nd Airborne Division, 161, 169–171, 175, 230, 233–240, 248, 334–338, 339

  execution of Jewish soldiers, 205–206, 277

  fears about German treatment of captured German Jewish soldiers, 178, 185, 193, 306–307

  First Army, 158–159, 287, 290–291

  Flying Coffins, 240–241

  grenades, 173

  IPW graduates in North Africa, 134

  military tribunal commissions, 346

  mobile Psychological Warfare Units, 183–184

  Nijmegen bridge operation, 235–237

  101st Airborne, 175

  106th Infantry Division, 268–277

  Operation Cobra, 219

  Operation Market Garden, 235, 238, 241, 245, 247–249

  2nd Armored Division, “Hell on Wheels,” 152–154, 178–179, 181–182, 183, 218, 221, 251, 252

  6th Armored Division, “Super Sixth,” 213, 215, 216–217, 317, 318, 327–331, 351–352

  Third Army, 206, 213, 307, 313, 318, 326

  35th Infantry Division, 206, 207, 310–311, 315

  treatment of, by French civilians, 174–175, 176

  28th Infantry Division, 254, 255–261, 263, 266, 267

  Waal bridge operation, 238–239

  Waco CG-4A gliders, 241

  “use of fear” interrogation technique, 157

  V

  von Tippelskirch, Kurt, 335–337

  W

  Waal bridge operation, 235, 237–239

  Warsaw Ghetto, 93–94, 185, 334, 369–370

  Wienecke, Robert, 236, 244

  Wiesel, Elie, 330

  “Willie Petes,” 173

  Winston, Walter, 240, 244

  With Rancor and Compassion: The Memoirs of a Jew Who Thought He Was a German (Selling), 378

  Witness to the Storm: A Jewish Journey from Nazi Berlin to the 82nd Airborne (Angress), 375

  Witte (German Lieutenant Colonel), 307–308

  Wöbbelin concentration camp, 338–345, 340, 341, 343, 355–356

  Wolf, Danielle (Dany), 103–104, 104, 224, 376

  Wood, George “Chappie,” 242–243, 344–345

  Wynne, Edward, 240, 244–245

  Z

  Zappler, Murray

  background, 271

  execution of, 276–277, 305–306, 308–310, 346–350

  under fire, 272–273

  grave of, 382, 382

  surrender, 276–277

  Zebra Battalion, 215

  About the Author

  BRUCE HENDERSON has written more than twenty books, including the #1 New York Times bestseller And the Sea Will Tell, the national bestseller Hero Found: The Greatest POW Escape of the Vietnam War, and Rescue at Los Baños: The Most Daring Prison Camp Raid of World War II. An award-winning journalist and author, he has taught writing and reporting at USC School of Journalism and Stanford University. He lives in Menlo Park, California.

  Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

  Also by Bruce Henderson

  Rescue at Los Baños: The Most Daring Prison Camp Raid of World War II

  Hero Found: The Greatest POW Escape of the
Vietnam War

  Down to the Sea: An Epic Story of Naval Disaster and Heroism in World War II

  And the Sea Will Tell (with Vincent Bugliosi)

  Fatal North: Murder and Survival on the First North Pole Expedition

  Trace Evidence: The Hunt for the I-5 Serial Killer

  True North: Peary, Cook, and the Race to the Pole

  Ring of Deceit: Inside the Biggest Sports and Banking Scandal in History

  Copyright

  SONS AND SOLDIERS. Copyright © 2017 by Bruce Henderson. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  FIRST EDITION

  Cover design by Mumtaz Mustafa

  Cover photographs: © Stephen Mulcahey/Arcangel (sky); © SZ Photo/Scherl/Bridgeman Images (men)

  ISBN 978-0-06-241909-5 (Hardcover)

  ISBN 978-0-06-280384-9 (International Trade Paperback Edition)

  EPub Edition July 2017 ISBN 978-0-06-241911-8

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  * One in six German Jews, more than one hundred thousand in total, fought for their country in World War I, and twelve thousand of them died on the fields of battle on the western and eastern fronts.

  * A crematorium was built at Dachau in 1940, and a second, larger crematorium with a gas chamber was erected in 1942.

 

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