I'm rummaging through my 20 years of Bund der Asienkämpfer magazines for Bernhard, and came across an interesting bit of information-- an account by a German taken prisoner during the collapse of the Palestine Front 21 September 1918.
On that date (which is the significant part), he reported being astonished at the "souvenir mania" among British troops, and remembers gawking in astonishment at their outlandish belts, festooned with buttons, cyphers, badges etc etc etc. (The Australians, on the other hand, robbed prisoners at gunpoint of watches, Iron Crosses, etc, while Indian troops were exemplary gentlemen.)
Now, I've always thought the term "Hate Belt" was a stupid one, but it is all I've ever heard these souvenir belts called.
BUT-- I had always thought that the sort of jumbled small bits and pieces one finds attached to them were stuck on by bored soldiers on slow troopships coming home after the war. This is the first time that I have ever seen first hand evidence that they were actually worn in the field, months before the war ended!
On that date (which is the significant part), he reported being astonished at the "souvenir mania" among British troops, and remembers gawking in astonishment at their outlandish belts, festooned with buttons, cyphers, badges etc etc etc. (The Australians, on the other hand, robbed prisoners at gunpoint of watches, Iron Crosses, etc, while Indian troops were exemplary gentlemen.)
Now, I've always thought the term "Hate Belt" was a stupid one, but it is all I've ever heard these souvenir belts called.
BUT-- I had always thought that the sort of jumbled small bits and pieces one finds attached to them were stuck on by bored soldiers on slow troopships coming home after the war. This is the first time that I have ever seen first hand evidence that they were actually worn in the field, months before the war ended!
Comment