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Given Up For Dead : American GI’s In The Nazi Concentration Camp At Berga

  • Given Up For Dead : American GI's In The Nazi  Concentration Camp At Berga
  • Attribution

    Flint Whitlock
  • Publication Details

    Book, Westview Press, 2005
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
     (LOWER LEVEL)  D805.5.B46 W55 2005  AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    When the Germans crashed through American lines during what became known as the “Battle of the Bulge,” in December 1944, thousands of stunned American soldiers who had never before been in combat were taken prisoner. The incarceration at Berga is the only known instance of captured American soldiers being turned into slave laborers at a Nazi concentration camp. Only the timely arrival of an American armored division at war’s end saved them all from certain death.Strangely, when the war was over, many of the Americans who had survived Berga were required to sign a “security certificate” which forbade them from ever disclosing the details of their imprisonment at Berga. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
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  • Notes

    • "During World War II, prisoners of war were required by the Geneva convention to be treated according to established rules of warfare. For the most part, the Nazis followed the rules. But in late 1944, when a large number of Americans were taken prisoner during the Battle of the Bulge and elsewhere, their captors had different plans for those Americans who were Jewish or from some other "undesirable" ethnic or religious group. Instead of being incarcerated in regular prisoner-of-war camps, several hundred were separated from their fellow captives and sent to the brutal slave-labor camp at Berga-an-der-Elster in Germany." "Until now, the story of what these men endured has been largely untold. Given Up for Dead chronicles the experience of Americans at Berga. Here is an incredible tale of survival against overwhelming odds, inhuman living and working conditions, and the imminent prospect of annihilation during a 300-kilometer death march designed to keep them out of the hands of the approaching Allies. That these men willed themselves to stay alive is an amazing testimony to the resiliency of the human spirit. Using the first-person accounts and definitive factual narrative, Flint Whitlock pays tribute to these brave men in telling their story, at last."–BOOK JACKET
  • ISBN

    • 0813342880
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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