Traveling Tuesday:
Life In Germany During the World Wars
I am an avid reader of fiction written during or about WWII.
Initially, it was difficult to find many novels set during that time. Then
several newscasters published books about “The Greatest Generation,” and it
suddenly became a popular era about which to write. Oral history projects
popped up as universities and museums sought to capture the stories of men and
women who lived during the war.
It is often said that the winners are the ones who write the
history books. I think there is a lot of validity in that statement. Whether it’s
something as casual as sports or as serious as war, no one wants to hear from
the losers. I don’t think an interview has ever been done with the guy who came
in last during an Olympic race!
My novella Love’s
Harvest is about a German man who was injured by mustard gas during WWI. In addition, I am in the outline stages of a novel in which the protagonist goes
into German occupied territory during WWII. Therefore, I needed to research
what life was like during the world wars.
Youtube has been a great tool for me to find interviews
about nearly every topic. I also discovered a website devoted to the German
homefront during WWII.
The most often asked interview question of Germans is “How
could Germans have not known about the death camps?” One man’s answer: “The
word used to describe what was happening to the Jews was ‘relocation.’ Where
were they? People simply didn’t ask, because ‘relocation’ had an ominous ring,
and they were scared to find out. When the Allies began seriously bombing
Germany, Germans forgot about the Jews altogether.”
The same question could be posed to Americans: “How could
Americans not have known about the Japanese ‘internment’ camps?”
Something to think about.
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