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Meeting with Lt. Ernst Sachse Fallschirmjäger II. and III. Btl. of LL-Sturm Regiment

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    Meeting with Lt. Ernst Sachse Fallschirmjäger II. and III. Btl. of LL-Sturm Regiment

    Shaun Winkler and I had the incredible honour today of meeting Lt. Ernst Sachse who served with the Fallschirmjäger II. and III. Btls of LL-Sturm Regiment. He lives in South Africa and will be 97 year on the 3rd May.

    He has a very clear sharp mind with a great sense of homour. Shaun and I spent 2 hours with him enjoying a coffee followed by a good German liqueur, which he insisted had to be finished before he would show us his photos and awards.

    Here below is some of the detail of our discussion together with photos. Shaun, I am not the FJ specialist, so please add or correct any of the detail as you see fit.

    Lt. Sachse first joined the 68th Inf Div at the start of the war. Shortly afterwards he joined the Fallschirmjäger LL- Sturm Regiment. He spent time in the II. Btl. 8. Kompanie under Oblt Reinhardt with whom he was good friends and who also survived the war. Later as he was promoted, he was transferred to the 12. Kompanie under Oblt Gansewig who was killed in Crete. He was also good friends with Oblt Gansewig and described him as a “good chappy”.

    Lt. Sachse was involved in an accident when his parashoot went into s spiral during a jump and broke bones in both his legs. As a result he did not participate in Crete.

    After that he was deployed with his Battalion to the Neva River near Leningrad to break the encirclement of the 1st Inf. Div. He says this was about the 22 to 24th September 1941. On day 4 of this battle he was wounded when he took a few bullets and was then evacuated to a hospital near his home. He explains that this battle was so intense that at the end of day 4, the only officer standing was the Battalion doctor who then took command and they battled to get a Battalion together in the Regiment which would normally have 4 Battalions.

    After his recovery, he was posted to Smolensk. He explained how they held the line with 1 man for every 100 meters and on one particular night the Russians crept up on them in dense fog. He anticipated the attack and instructed his men to hold of shooting until he gave the command, which he did when they were within “hand grenade throwing distance”. He added, that looking back he is mostly surprised at the blind faith his men had in him.

    At some point in time he was again wounded and after recovery he was deployed to the German High Command in Berlin. He did not enjoy the administration job and asked for a transfer back to the front line. He was then given the job of establishing new units in France and it was at this time that the Normandy invasion happened. During battle he was again wounded when he took a splinter in his leg and “the American tanks chasing him were a bit faster than he could run with a splinter in his leg”.

    He was then taken prisoner and was shipped off to England. In the POW Camp he met up with a Submariner and a Nachtjager. The 3 of them planned an escape, however, someone in the camp leaked their plans to the camp authorities and the 3 were immediately shipped off to the USA where he ended in a POW camp near Mexico. He was later shipped to a POW camp about 150kms from Washington. During this time his family assumed he was MIA.

    An incredible once in a lifetime encounter with a very unassuming man, living a quiet life in an old age home where no one knows what he has experienced in life.

    Shaun and I could not believe what had just experienced.

    André

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            #6
            Great story!Amazing the way he kept all of his medals!

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                      #11
                      Thanks for posting the details and photos of your visit André!

                      His photos portray the look of a very competent and focused officer. It must have been a pleasure to talk to him. Consider yourself lucky!

                      His awards are interesting. Especially the Fallschirm Division cufftitle and his Sturm Rgt pin! I assume he joined the Sturm Rgt sometime in late 1940.
                      Willi

                      Preußens Gloria!

                      sigpic

                      Sapere aude

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                        He started off by telling us that his memory is no longer that good, but it was very good for a 97 year old!

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                          #13
                          very interesting story!!! You are very lucky to have been able to talk to this man...!! Thanks for sharing the story..

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                            #14
                            Thanks Andre for the post and giving me the oppertunity to meet this FJ vet.

                            Well yes it truly was an honour to meet a survivor of the Sturm Regiment, especially here in South Africa. Its not every day one gets to meet a FJ vet, in fact this is the 1st FJ vet I have ever met. Andre and I were in awe as we sat and listened to this mans amazing stories.

                            He spoke about his men that served under him with such admiration and said that he was amazed that they did everything he asked of them.

                            This does not suprise me at all as he really has nice way about him.

                            I have to add something to Andres post,

                            He was telling us about how bitter the fighting was on the Neva River and how many of his company had been killed. We asked him what happened once he was wounded. He said he was shot in the arm and torso. He was evacuated back to Germany, where they patched him up and sent him home, he said he looked a real mess with a bandage around his arm with blood on it and his torso was also bandaged with blood on it . He said his clothes were filthy with plenty of mud, so you can imagine I guess he looked like he had been to hell and back.

                            As he opened the front door of his house his wife was sitting down sowing a dress and she says to him and I quote, " Shame lovy, did you have an accident"

                            Well all of us pissed ourselves laughing, very funny .

                            Anyway to be honest one of the best days of my life meeting a truly great warrior and a really nice man .

                            Regards
                            Shaun
                            Last edited by Shaun Winkler; 03-03-2009, 06:30 AM.

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                              #15
                              Sachse

                              Andre & Shaun,

                              Fantastic story, great pictures. Thanks for sharing.

                              Best,

                              Jeroen

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