For my immigration visa, issued under the Displaced Persons Act. |
Horodyszcze |
Female Hitler Youth |
My father, Jan, was from Horodyszcze, a
village about 25 miles south of Biała Podlaska. He was captured by the Germans
in 1943 and survived four concentration camps: Gross-Rosen, called “The Bone
Mill” by the Germans; Dachau; Natzweiler Struthof in occupied France; and
Neuengamme. As a child, I remember him telling me that every day, he didn’t
know if he would live or die.
My mother, Lieselotte, was the daughter
of a Nazi Party political officer in Dresden. Her father wanted her to marry an
SS officer. She wanted to be a nurse, which her father opposed. He relented
after Hitler announced the need for more Brauneschwester, which was the nursing
corps established for the SS.
Candidates had to meet rigorous SS
screening requirements, which included family records through seven generations
confirming Aryan racial purity and excellent physical and mental health. She
qualified and told me that, when the examiners stamped “Good Racial Material”
on her application, her father was very proud.
In early April 1945, as the British
approached Neuengamme, the Germans evacuated the camp and forced the prisoners
to march to Lübeck, about 80 miles away. The SS guards had strict orders to
kill prisoners who could no longer walk and thousands were shot. In late April
1945, the Germans loaded about 9,300 surviving prisoners onto the ships Cap
Arcona, Thielbek, and Athen. Jan was on the Athen. The prisoners were confined
in the ships’ holds for several days without food or water.
On 3 May 1945, RAF squadrons attacked
the ships in the Bay of Lübeck. The RAF said it believed they carried SS troops
escaping to Norway. The RAF also said that intelligence confirming that the
ships instead carried prisoners didn’t reach the RAF squadrons in time to halt
the attack. The Cap Arcona and Thielbek were sunk, the RAF strafed the
prisoners in the water, and only a handful survived.
The Athen was some miles away near
Neustadt and, although strafed by the RAF, it was not sunk and the 2,000
prisoners survived. The British then established a Displaced Persons camp in
Neustadt for the Neuengamme survivors and this is where Jan lived. My mother
told me that my father told her that RAF pilots definitely saw the prisoners in
their prison garb on the Athen's deck but continued strafing. That same year,
the British government sealed its report on what took place for the next 100
years.
For my mother’s first year of training,
she spent six months in Germany followed by six months on the Russian Front.
For her second year, she was in Dresden’s hospital treating the wounded that
had fought the advancing Russians. In mid-February 1945, the British and
Americans firebombed Dresden. Her hospital was destroyed and, although many of
her nurse colleagues were killed, she survived through sheer luck and it was a
French medical guest worker that pulled her from the rubble.
On 8 May 1945, Germany surrendered and,
as Dresden was in the Soviet-occupied sector of the country, Soviet troops did
pretty much what they wanted. Rape was common and my mother remembered one poor
girl she treated who had been torn from front to back. She avoided rape by following
the advice of the wife of a Russian officer. She was told to wear her nursing
uniform whenever she went out on the street. The Russians had an especially
strong respect for medical personnel and this worked for her.
In early 1946, there were rumors that
the Soviets would close the border between eastern Germany and western Germany.
They began closing the border in June. Not wanting to be trapped in the Soviet
sector, Lieselotte left. Her nurse friend in Hamburg said there might be work
there, so she put some potatoes in her pockets and slipped onto a freight train
headed for Hamburg. As it turned out, there was no work in Hamburg but her
friend told her to try Neustadt, so she went there. Still without work and
hungry, she went to a movie theater. It was standing room only and, weak from
hunger, she reeled backward into Jan, who caught her.
I was born in a DP camp in Germany
(Neustadt in Holstein) in 1947. Life in the DP camp was austere. Germany was an
occupied country and Allied policy was that no help should be given in
rebuilding it except for the minimum necessary to mitigate starvation. Jan and
his Polish buddies made schnapps to exchange for meat with local Germans.
Because of the scarcity of meat, they sometimes had to pilfer piglets from
local farmers. When she could, Lieselotte worked on local farms and brought
home vegetables. She also made schnapps deliveries by hiding the bottles under
me in the baby carriage.
The trauma of the concentration camps
left my father emotionally distraught. My mother told me he was becoming
increasingly controlling and she believed he was fearful of losing her.
Meanwhile, she had to withstand venomous denigration from local Germans, who
called her a Polish whore and spit on me in the baby carriage. Her father in Dresden
was incensed that his racially pure daughter married a Pole and gave birth to a
Polish baby. When she sent him a letter with a photo of me in it, he returned
it unanswered. When she wanted to take me to Dresden, her father refused to
have me in his house.
Knowing that the Displaced Persons Act
would expire in August 1952, Jan applied for emigration to the U.S.
Lieselotte’s father insisted that I emigrate with him because, as a Pole, I
would always be a second-class person in Germany while, as an American, I would
not. It was an agonizing decision for her because she knew that she likely
would never see me again.
In June 1951, Jan and I left Bremerhaven
on the USS M. B. Stewart and arrived at Ellis Island on 27 June. Because he
couldn’t care for me, he placed me in the Polish Roman Catholic orphanage in
New Britain, CT. The nuns were very strict and discipline was harsh. When we
were punished, we had to hold our hands out and have our palms hit with a belt.
My father then put me in the Swedish
Christian Lutheran orphanage in Cromwell, CT. It was on a working farm with
cows, pigs, chickens, and vegetable gardens. I was five years old and now had
to learn English. My father visited me every few months and we always spoke
Polish. When I was nine, I told him that I couldn’t speak Polish anymore. After
that, we only spoke English.
At first, life was difficult for my
father. His English was very limited and, as a cabinet maker, he only had
occasional employment. After he joined a labor union, employment was more
stable. In general, life in the orphanage was satisfactory. We worked hard on
the farm and were never hungry. I was given piano lessons and sang in the
choir. The Swedes who managed the orphanage also managed a Swedish college in
Chicago (now North Park University). At 18, I left the orphanage and was on my
own. I enrolled at North Park, which is where I met my wife, Ginny.
I have a Ph.D. in Public Policy from
George Mason University’s School of Public Policy, an M.S. in Systems
Management from the University of Southern California’s Viterbi School of
Engineering, an M.A. in Science, Technology, and Public Policy from The George
Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs, a B.A. in
German from the University of Maryland, and a B.A. in Mathematics from North
Park University in Chicago.
For my first life following graduation
in 1969, I was a career Air Force Telecommunications Officer and my family and
I spent 11 of our 20 years overseas. Following retirement from the Air Force,
my second life was as a Systems Analyst with Northrop Grumman. For my third
life, I was an IT Specialist with the Federal Government. With this as a
background, one might think I’d be a tad nit-oriented (OK, I might be). I’m now
in my fourth and last life, i.e., retirement. My wife and I enjoy being able to
spend more time with our three adult children, their spouses, and our five
grandchildren.
Fortunately, I was able to reunite with
my mother in 1976. I was stationed in Kansas City, MO, and had to go to Germany
on business. A fellow officer who had emigrated from Germany at the age of nine
was going with me and because he spoke some German, he offered to find my mother.
We were successful and it was a highly emotional experience. She had remarried
and had two sons, Thomas and Matthias. Her husband Moritz accepted me as a
third son and the boys accepted me as their older brother. My mother is now 92
and lives in Lübeck. I call her twice monthly. My father died in 1990.
I was able to find my relatives in
Poland using a picture of my grandmother’s headstone that my father had. With
the help of the Papal Nuncio in Warsaw, I wrote to the priest whose church
served Horodyszcze. He relayed my letter to my relatives in Biała Podlaska and
I met them in 2006. Anna, my first cousin, welcomed me with the traditional
Slavic greeting of bread and salt.
I now have the one problem. Every time
my Polish side puts me in a cheerful state celebrating life, my German side
psychoanalyzes everything and messes up my day. It’s really annoying.
My mother and I in our room at the DP camp. |
My father while at the DP camp. Despite the austerity, he was able to assemble an outfit popular in pre-war Poland. |
My mother and I, circa 2000, on the Baltic shore. Moritz took the photo and we were in Wismar, which is in the former East Germany. |
My wife and I in front of Ford’s Theater in D.C. under a banner featuring our daughter Jenna, who starred in “The Glass Menagerie” two years ago. |