(Late April 1945. After fleeing from the advancing Russian Army
my younger sister and I found refuge at a boarding school in Droyssig, near Leipzig,
southwest of Berlin. I was 14 years old. We did not know the fate of our mother and
two youngest sisters)
. . . . . So we lived our lives,
carefree and selfishly enjoying our good fortune, while our world was quietly,
or not so quietly, tumbling around us.
We had the inherent ability of all children to take life as it comes,
and to live it to the fullest, regardless of circumstances. The hard facts of war caught up with us
sooner than expected. One day our
principal called us together and informed us that we were moving into the basement
in the left wing of the building. I
expected this to be a precaution against possible air raids. We packed our toothbrushes, combs and a
little extra underwear and moved. The
basement had been furnished with bunk beds, tables and chairs and we made ourselves at home.
Books and games had been brought in from our library; things to do to
pass the time. We were here to stay for
the duration. Not until we heard the
muffled sounds of gunfire did our teachers tell us the real truth. We were not preparing for possible air raids
but for an attack by the American Army.
Even though the principal played down any danger, she did warn us of a
possible tank attack and artillery fire.
She urged us to be calm and to be cooperative, should any foreign
soldiers come into our shelter. My mouth
turned dry, as if a ball of cotton had soaked up every bit of moisture in my
system. Apprehension tensed every muscle
in my body. The stories I had heard
about our enemies were too horrible to contemplate. They would offer candy bars laced with razor
blades, or poisoned cookies, to German children and watch them die. My mind was racing, trying to figure out a
way to save my sister and myself, to no avail.
We were trapped.
The muffled sounds were coming
closer, occasionally a few single explosions could be distinguished from the
rest of the noise. Then an artillery
shell hit the building. It shook only
slightly, not nearly as much as I did.
Irmgard was quietly playing with her doll, as if nothing had
happened. She was so much braver than I
was, or maybe she did not know as much as I did? I felt such a coward and it made me angry,
but I kept trembling, just the same.
Then it was quiet for a while. We
ate a cold meal and settled down for the night.
The rumbling continued off and on throughout the night and the next day,
when it finally came closer and closer.
Numerous hits on the building kept us from sleeping that night. Some shells landed on the upper floors of our
wing, but most hit the front portion of the building. The shelling stopped again and it was quiet
once more. Not until the following day
did we hear the tanks rumble down the street next to our shelter. I expected soldiers to storm in any minute
and take us all prisoner, instead our principal walked in quietly and asked for
our attention. We had been asked to
evacuate the building. It was a perfect
site for headquarters for the Americans, the Amis, as we called them. Plenty of dormitory space for the soldiers, a
large enough kitchen to cook for an army and the teachers' rooms made perfect
quarters for the officers.
After gathering our few
belongings we marched in single file to the front entrance of the building,
where a rather nice looking Ami soldier directed us toward the castle, a few
hundred yards away. Crossing the street
we were surprised by the sound of more machine gun fire. It was impossible to tell from where it came
or at whom it was directed, so we started running for the safety of the thick
walls of the castle. Once inside we sat around
the fireplace in the great hall, waiting for further orders. Single shots rang out now and again,
interrupted by bursts of machine gun fire, but soon all was quiet. The Amis had won,
there was no more German resistance in our little town.
Later that day provisions were
brought from the school and mattresses were placed along the walls of the huge
main room in the castle. We made
ourselves at home -- one more time.
After supper we settled down for our first night under foreign
occupation. So far it had not been at
all as I expected. The soldiers had not
bothered us. We had not even seen many
of them, except a few on tanks as they were rolling through the town. Then they moved into our school. Temporarily we were under house arrest, until
the commandant could decide what to do with us.
Certainly we were no threat to the Amis, but any large gatherings were
forbidden by order of the occupation forces.
So we stayed within the castle grounds for days on end, until the
restrictions were lifted and we were free to roam.
Curiosity won over apprehension;
we needed to look our enemy in the face.
Marching down the street toward our school we saw some young, tall,
good-looking guys in clean, handsome uniforms, flirt with the kitchen maids
from our school. They were looking out
the basement window of OUR school, shamelessly flirting back. I was appalled. Those were German girls, consorting with the
enemy; it made me almost sick. Years of
propaganda had done i