R.i.p
So many comments for someone who thought to have served his fatherland behind a telephone desk... He was lucky to get so seriously wounded in the very early stages of the war (Poland campaing), in order to get a nice assignment at AH's HQ.
I read his book and enjoyed it; it's interesting to read a story from another perspective not from a biased politically correct today journalists' WW2 story point of view. He was quite happy to have been withdrawn from the front, he doesn't hide it in his book. The journalist who wrote the article forgot to mention that he spent 9-10 years of hell in Russian captivity, being hit in his testicles like in the James Bond movie "Casino Royal", being deprived of sleeping, being asked 1'000'000 times the same questions by his Russian inquisitors, trying to have him admitted that AH still lived. I can also understand the Russians on the other hand, he was lucky to get away alive again and being able to live a very long life, considering what he went through (being shot just centimiters away from his heart, having had a stressful job and finally to have been POW so long... many people today would get a stroke for that...). Maybe he didn't have such a happy life. When he came back from captivity, he found a different world, soon divorced, but in the other hand found quite immediately a job in post war West Germany where working people in all fields were needed and soon German economy boomed in the 50ies (til today!) also thanks to those people who rebuild it, maybe trying to forget as much as possible all the horrors of war and focusing on their lives and working hard. Only when the big moment (death) is approaching people like Misch (not only him also Hitler's secretary and others) opened up and talked about it. Some tried to hide their feeling or were looking for excuses like "I was just following the orders"... Misch was not like this; he told what he thought; he was just a loyal employee of his boss, like he said, like most Germans... (I don't recall exactly but don't think he was in the party). Too bad that the boss happened to be AH... You can't change it and also Misch knew it. If he was the clerk of uncle job he would have worn his medals until his very last day...
Just my 2 cents!
ciao
So many comments for someone who thought to have served his fatherland behind a telephone desk... He was lucky to get so seriously wounded in the very early stages of the war (Poland campaing), in order to get a nice assignment at AH's HQ.
I read his book and enjoyed it; it's interesting to read a story from another perspective not from a biased politically correct today journalists' WW2 story point of view. He was quite happy to have been withdrawn from the front, he doesn't hide it in his book. The journalist who wrote the article forgot to mention that he spent 9-10 years of hell in Russian captivity, being hit in his testicles like in the James Bond movie "Casino Royal", being deprived of sleeping, being asked 1'000'000 times the same questions by his Russian inquisitors, trying to have him admitted that AH still lived. I can also understand the Russians on the other hand, he was lucky to get away alive again and being able to live a very long life, considering what he went through (being shot just centimiters away from his heart, having had a stressful job and finally to have been POW so long... many people today would get a stroke for that...). Maybe he didn't have such a happy life. When he came back from captivity, he found a different world, soon divorced, but in the other hand found quite immediately a job in post war West Germany where working people in all fields were needed and soon German economy boomed in the 50ies (til today!) also thanks to those people who rebuild it, maybe trying to forget as much as possible all the horrors of war and focusing on their lives and working hard. Only when the big moment (death) is approaching people like Misch (not only him also Hitler's secretary and others) opened up and talked about it. Some tried to hide their feeling or were looking for excuses like "I was just following the orders"... Misch was not like this; he told what he thought; he was just a loyal employee of his boss, like he said, like most Germans... (I don't recall exactly but don't think he was in the party). Too bad that the boss happened to be AH... You can't change it and also Misch knew it. If he was the clerk of uncle job he would have worn his medals until his very last day...
Just my 2 cents!
ciao
Comment