German Women POWs Were Speechless When They Saw America for the First Time-ZZ
The train left the processing facility in New Jersey on a Tuesday morning in October 1944. And for the first hour, nobody spoke. Not because…
Read more“No One Can Eats Like This”—German Women POWs Froze When They Saw American Breakfast-ZZ – Part 2
Not a replacement for the old one, not a framework [music] for a new set of conclusions, just the honest map of what was actually…
Read more“No One Can Eats Like This”—German Women POWs Froze When They Saw American Breakfast-ZZ
Camp Forest, Tennessee. January 1945. The smell reached them before the doors opened. [music] Something warm, something fried, something that had no name in the…
Read moreGerman Women POWs Froze When They Saw Who Walked Through That Door — Then Everything Changed-ZZ – Part 2
Helen unwrapped it. The wooden comb, one of the ones from the wash station. Simple and utilitarian. The kind of object that had no value…
Read moreGerman Women POWs Froze When They Saw Who Walked Through That Door — Then Everything Changed-ZZ
Camp Forest, Tennessee, February 1946. The war had been over for 6 months in the way that wars are over, formally on paper, in the…
Read more“Write Your Name”— German Women POWs Were Handed a Pen and Paper. What They Wrote Changed Everything-ZZ
Spring 1945, across a thousand prisoner of war camps scattered through the American heartland, the same ritual unfolded each morning. Roll call, breakfast, work assignments….
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