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I'm from Germany, from Nuremberg. My dad was drafted into WWII at age fifteen in 1943, and by the time he was seventeen, he was an American prisoner of war, somewhere in southern Bavaria by the Inn river.
Dad managed to escape. Was caught and brought back. Escaped again. And was almost caught again. There was an African-American soldier driving a truck and caught sight of my dad. Dad knew there was no use in trying to run. The soldier told him to get in the back of the truck - Dad, of course, thought he was going to be transported back to the camp - but the soldier gave Dad a bar of candy and the first cigarette of his life. Dad lit up and passed out.
As luck would have it, the American soldier was on his way to Nuremberg. On the outskirts of that bombed-out shell of a town, he told Dad it was time to get off the truck before they both got into a shitload of trouble.
It is such a pity that Dad didn't get the soldier's name, or was able to have any kind of conversation with him. I've wondered for so many years - there has got to be a family somewhere in the United States where Grandpa has told the story of this particular incident. Of picking up a scrawny kid - a Prisoner of War! - who passed out when he lit up his first cigarette.
And how he brought him to safety.
Bless you, so many years later, unknown soldier.
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