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Wehrpass of a brave man

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    Wehrpass of a brave man

    A veteran of WWI and a soldier again in 1939
    Attached Files

    #2
    ... but what makes him brave?

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      #3
      Civil Courage!

      Okay, he was drunk ... but if only more would have had the courage to speak up, perhaps ...
      Attached Files

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        #4
        On October 29, 1939 the drunk Lw-Bau soldier Martin Lang went from table to table in a Bavarian pub calling the Fueher a dumbass, saying that Hitler, Goebbles and the others can kiss his a**. That the Fueher is an idiot and Hitler is the biggest dumbass.

        On January 1940, Lang was sentenced by a Luftwaffe court-martial to 3 weeks incarceration

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          #5
          54 years old and his second war ... maybe he was not all drunk ... very nice and interesting .....

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            #6
            He is a lucky man only to have got 3 weeks.

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              #7
              Originally posted by David Fettes View Post
              He is a lucky man only to have got 3 weeks.
              You absolutely right David.
              I think he was lucky that his case was handled by a military court and not a civilian court - they only charged him with "causing a disturbance".
              In civilian court he probably would have been charged with Führer-Beleidigung a possible concentration-camp sentence.
              Last edited by naxos; 11-22-2014, 02:11 AM.

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                #8
                Did he go on to serve longer or was he discharged?
                Jef

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by David Fettes View Post
                  He is a lucky man only to have got 3 weeks.
                  Maybe the judge thougth the same about their leaders

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by JUNGCO View Post
                    Did he go on to serve longer or was he discharged?
                    Jef
                    I wonder the same ... and it will be interesting to find out when I have the pass in hand and can look through it.

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                      #11
                      Originally posted by Ironcrown View Post
                      Maybe the judge thougth the same about their leaders
                      Some did.
                      Certain is that German military courts were more tolerant in this kind of (political) misconduct then their civilian, Nazi career, leader pleasing, counterparts.

                      .
                      Last edited by naxos; 11-22-2014, 04:18 PM.

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                        #12
                        He does not show up on the German Grave Search so maybe he survived it all.

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by naxos View Post
                          You absolutely right David.
                          I think he was lucky that his case was handled by a military court and not a civilian court - they only charged him with "causing a disturbance".
                          In civilian court he probably would have been charged with Führer-Beleidigung a possible concentration-camp sentence.
                          I agree with you : with the soldiers, expecially with the front line soldiers, there was more tolerance compared with civilian....

                          from the memory of Lt. Gerhard Muhm (29 Pz. Gre. Div. in Italy)....

                          http://www.larchivio.org/xoom/gerhardmuhm2.htm


                          ....... Of course. I have always been convinced that if we did fight right to the end, it was because we were always fighting for the comrade on our right, by the side of the one or our left, or perhaps for our immediate commander, whom we respected or perhaps because we believed we were fighting for our honour, doing our duty as soldiers up until the very last day. In 1944-45 it was very difficult to persuade the front-line soldiers to fight for Hitler any more, or even for Germany. We even sang satirical songs against Hitler, songs that strengthened our fighting spirit and which nobody objected to, because you do not argue with the front line soldier, the man we called the Front-Soldat............

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                            #14
                            Yes, he was lucky. Alot of variables came into effect when running across the military court system...specific crime, particular military judge trying the case, where crime was comitted, and early vs later war punishments. He could have ended up doing a stint at the Torgau military prison.

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