Friday, December 16, 2011

Displaced








The S.S. Wilhelm Gustloff 



Far from Berlin and the Allied bombings, the people of East Prussia were isolated
and insulated for much of WWII. Their farms and cities were nestled near clear,
deep lakes and rivers. Surrounded by fairytale forests, living in the country's
breadbasket, they had access to better food than the rest of Germany.

Until the winter of 1945.

The Long Arms of Revenge 

In January of that year, the Russian army advanced across the border and into East
Prussia. Stalin ordered his soldiers to kill and rape with abandon, giving them his
permission to take revenge for earlier German atrocities in Russia. The old men,
women, and children of East Prussia tried to outrun the Russians. Many waited too
long, afraid Hitler would make good his threat to execute anyone who abandoned
their homes and fled.

Those left behind to face the Russians were subjected to the most barbaric treatment
imaginable. Women and girls were gang-raped, nailed to barn doors, and used as
target practice. Russian tanks crushed the people as they tried to escape across
snow-covered fields. Overhead, Russian aircraft shot at the refugees as they tried to
cross frozen stretches of water. Thousands, including horses, drowned.

Final Voyage   

Along the escape route to the Baltic Sea many more died of exposure and starvation.
Those who pressed on clung to the rumor that a ship was waiting at a port city to
take them to all to safety in the west of the country. The ship was a former recreational
liner called the S.S. Wilhlem Gustloff. The decorated Nazi U-boat commander, Admiral
Karl Donitz, was organizing the evacuation.

More than 10,000 German refugees converged at the port. Rushing the pier, they all
fought for a place aboard the ship. Desperate mothers flung their children into the  
arms of strangers to get them to safety. Once aboard the ship, thousands of women
and children crammed themselves shoulder to shoulder in the cavernous arms of the
ship's drained swimming pool. The stench of sea sickness combined with dirty bodies
was overpowering. Yet once at sea, the people were grateful to be speeding away
from the clutches of the Red Army.

Their freedom, however, was short-lived.

A patrolling Soviet submarine spotted the ship and delivered three torpedoes. Written
on the first torpedo were the words, For the Motherland. On the second torpedo were
the words, For the Soviet People. The third torpedo carried the message, For 
Stalingrad. A fourth torpedo, which got jammed, carried the words, For Stalin. 

Forty minutes later, the ship sank, killing 9, 343 people. It is considered the greatest
maritime disaster in history.

By comparison, 1, 517 perished in the sinking of the Titanic.

For more information on the Russian invasion of East Prussia and the sinking of the 
S.S. Wilhelm Gustloff there is an excellent three-part program on You Tube. Here is 
the link to the first episode  --
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIaLZdXJiNY


Thursday, December 15, 2011

Jive Talkin'




Some people insist Cab Calloway was the first rapper and the man who originated backsliding dance moves, long before Michael Jackson started Moonwalking. For those growing up in the 1930s and 1940s, Calloway personified cool. His musical talents, accompanied by his Cotton Club vernacular -- the scat and jive of Harlem -- made him and his orchestra hugely popular with white and black audiences. Calloway even penned the Bible of Jive, his own Hepster's Dictionary, which enjoyed many printings and revisions.

As Calloway himself explained.. . .

"...I compiled the first glossary of words, expressions, and the general patois employed by musicians and entertainers in New York’s teeming Harlem. That the general public agreed with me is amply evidenced by the fact that the present issue is the sixth edition since 1938 and is the official jive language reference book of the New York Public Library."

Don't look for a Rosetta Stone DVD dedicated to Harlem Jive or expect your local community college to offer a class. But if you look in the dark recesses of the Internet, you may be able to "collar" a copy of this classic so other hep cats don't think you're "icky." Or treat yourself to this clip from Stormy Weather  and listen to the original hepcat perform "Jumpin' Jive." (Click on the white arrow below) 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8yGGtVKrD8




Dead Ends





Early on in my research into my father's military history and the events in my novel I discovered discrepancies. For years I tried to locate information on a troop ship that was sunk in the North Atlantic with much loss of life. My father was witness to that tragedy.


Eventually, I discovered why it was so hard to validate his story:


The records of ships used to carry troops to their theaters of operations were destroyed intentionally in 1951. "According to our [U. S. National Archives] records, in 1951 the Department of the Army destroyed all passenger lists, manifests, logs of vessels, and troop movement files of United States Army Transports for World War II." (Sorry, but there was no word on why the records were destroyed.) Thus there is no longer an official record of who sailed on what ship, though there are still valuable sources that can be found.....Wesley Johnston


Source and additional information: WW2troopships.com and WWIItroopships.com