I first heard about this story last night. I thought it was worth sharing.
Merry Christmas
"Truce In the Forest"
by Fritz Vincken
It was Christmas Eve, and the last, desperate German
offensive of World War II raged around our tiny cabin. Suddenly, there was a knock on the door...
When we heard the knock on our door that Christmas Eve in
1944, neither Mother nor I had the slightest inkling of the quiet miracle that
lay in store for us.
I was 12 then, and we were living in a small cottage in the Hürtgen Forest, near the German-Belgian border.
Father had stayed at the cottage on hunting weekends before the war; when
Allied bombers partly destroyed our hometown of Aachen, he sent us to live there. He had been
ordered into the civil-defense fire guard in the border town of Monschau, four miles
away.
"You'll be safe in the woods," he had told me.
"Take care of Mother. Now you're the man of the family."
But, nine days before Christmas, Field Marshal von Rundstedt
had launched the last, desperate German offensive of the war, and now, as I
went to the door, the Battle
of the Bulge was raging all around us. We heard the incessant booming of field
guns; planes soared continuously overhead; at night, searchlights stabbed
through the darkness. Thousands of Allied and German soldiers were fighting and
dying nearby.
When that first knock came, Mother quickly blew out the
candles; then, as I went to answer it, she stepped ahead of me and pushed open
the door. Outside, like phantoms against the snowclad trees, stood two
steel-helmeted men. One of them spoke to Mother in a language we did not
understand, pointing to a third man lying in the snow. She realized before I
did that these were American soldiers. Enemies!
Mother stood silent, motionless, her hand on my shoulder.
They were armed and could have forced their entrance, yet they stood there and
asked with their eyes. And the wounded man seemed more dead than alive.
"Kommt rein," Mother said finally. "Come in." The soldiers
carried their comrade inside and stretched him out on my bed.
None of them understood German. Mother tried French, and one
of the soldiers could converse in that language. As Mother went to look after
the wounded man, she said to me, "The fingers of those two are numb. Take
off their jackets and boots, and bring in a bucket of snow." Soon I was
rubbing their blue feet with snow.
We learned that the stocky, dark- haired fellow was Jim; his
friend, tall and slender, was Robin. Harry, the wounded one, was now sleeping
on my bed, his face as white as the snow outside. They'd lost their battalion
and had wandered in the forest for three days, looking for the Americans,
hiding from the Germans. They hadn't shaved, but still, without their heavy
coats, they looked merely like big boys. And that was the way Mother began to
treat them.
Now Mother said to me, "Go get Hermann. And bring six
potatoes."
This was a serious departure from our pre-Christmas plans.
Hermann was the plump rooster(named after portly Hermann Guring, Hitler's No.
2, for whom Mother had little affection) that we had been fattening for weeks
in the hope that Father would be home for Christmas. But, some hours before,
when it was obvious that Father would not make it, Mother had decided that
Hermann should live a few more days, in case Father could get home for New
Year's. Now she had changed her mind again: Hermann would serve an immediate,
pressing purpose.
While Jim and I helped with the cooking, Robin took care of
Harry. He had a bullet through his upper leg, and had almost bled to death.
Mother tore a bedsheet into long strips for bandages.
Soon, the tempting smell of roast chicken permeated our
room. I was setting the table when once again there came a knock at the
door.
Expecting to find more lost Americans, I opened the door
without hesitation. There stood four soldiers, wearing uniforms quite familiar
to me after five years of war. They were Wehrmacht! Germans!
I was paralyzed with fear. Although still a child, I knew
the harsh law: sheltering enemy soldiers constituted high treason. We could all
be shot! Mother was frightened, too. Her face was white, but she stepped
outside and said, quietly, "Fröhliche Weihnachten." The soldiers
wished her a Merry Christmas, too.
"We have lost our regiment and would like to wait for
daylight," explained the corporal. "Can we rest here?"
"Of course," Mother replied, with a calmness born
of panic. "You can also have a fine, warm meal and eat till the pot is
empty."
The Germans smiled as they sniffed the aroma through the
half-open door. "But," Mother added firmly, "we have three other
guests, whom you may not consider friends." Now her voice was suddenly
sterner than I'd ever heard it before. "This is Christmas Eve, and there
will be no shooting here."
"Who's inside?" the corporal demanded.
"Amerikaner?"
Mother looked at each frost-chilled face.
"Listen," she said slowly. "You could be my sons, and so could
those in there. A boy with a gunshot wound, fighting for his life. His two
friends lost like you and just as hungry and exhausted as you are. This one
night," she turned to the corporal and raised her voice a little,
"this Christmas night, let us forget about killing."
The corporal stared at her. There were two or three endless
seconds of silence. Then Mother put an end to indecision. "Enough
talking!" she ordered and clapped her hands sharply. "Please put your
weapons here on the woodpile and hurry up before the others eat the
dinner!"
Dazedly, the four soldiers placed their arms on the pile of
firewood just inside the door: three carbines, a light machine gun and two
bazookas. Meanwhile, Mother was speaking French rapidly to Jim. He said something
in English, and to my amazement I saw the American boys, too, turn their
weapons over to Mother.
Now, as Germans and Americans tensely rubbed elbows in the
small room, Mother was really on her mettle. Never losing her smile, she tried
to find a seat for everyone. We had only three chairs, but Mother's bed was
big, and on it she placed two of the newcomers side by side with Jim and Robin.
Despite the strained atmosphere, Mother went right on
preparing dinner. But Hermann wasn't going to grow any bigger, and now there
were four more mouths to feed. "Quick," she whispered to me,
"get more potatoes and some oats. These boys are hungry, and a starving
man is an angry one."
While foraging in the storage room, I heard Harry moan. When
I returned, one of the Germans had put on his glasses to inspect the American's
wound. "Do you belong to the medical corps?" Mother asked him.
"No," he answered. "But I studied medicine at Heidelberg until a few months ago."
Thanks to the cold, he told the Americans in what sounded like fairly good
English, Harry's wound hadn't become infected. "He is suffering from a
severe loss of blood," he explained to Mother. "What he needs is rest
and nourishment."
Relaxation was now beginning to replace suspicion. Even to
me, all the soldiers looked very young as we sat there together. Heinz and
Willi, both from Cologne,
were 16. The German corporal, at 23, was the oldest of them all. From his food
bag he drew out a bottle of red wine, and Heinz managed to find a loaf of rye
bread. Mother cut that in small pieces to be served with the dinner; half the
wine, however, she put away "for the wounded boy."
Then Mother said grace. I noticed that there were tears in
her eyes as she said the old, familiar words, "Komm, Herr Jesus. Be our
guest." And as I looked around the table, I saw tears, too, in the eyes of
the battle-weary soldiers, boys again, some from America,
some from Germany,
all far from home.
Just before midnight, Mother went to the doorstep and asked
us to join her to look up at the Star of Bethlehem. We all stood beside her
except Harry, who was sleeping. For all of us during that moment of silence,
looking at the brightest star in the heavens, the war was a distant,
almost-forgotten thing.
Our private armistice continued next morning. Harry woke in
the early hours, and swallowed some broth that Mother fed him. With the dawn,
it was apparent that he was becoming stronger. Mother now made him an
invigorating drink from our one egg, the rest of the corporal's wine and some
sugar. Everyone else had oatmeal. Afterward, two poles and Mother's best
tablecloth were fashioned into a stretcher for Harry.
The corporal then advised the Americans how to find their
way back to their lines. Looking over Jim's map, the corporal pointed out a
stream. "Continue along this creek," he said, "and you will find
the 1st Army rebuilding its forces on its upper course." The medical
student relayed the information in English.
"Why don't we head for Monschau?" Jim had the
student ask. "Nein!" the corporal exclaimed. "We've retaken
Monschau."
Now Mother gave them all back their weapons. "Be
careful, boys," she said. "I want you to get home someday where you
belong. God bless you all!" The German and American soldiers shook hands,
and we watched them disappear in opposite directions.
When I returned inside, Mother had brought out the old
family Bible. I glanced over her shoulder. The book was open to the Christmas
story, the Birth in the Manger and how the Wise Men came from afar bearing
their gifts. Her finger was tracing the last line from Matthew 2:12:
"...they departed into their own country another way."
No comments:
Post a Comment