The German Perspective of WW2 | Memoirs Of WWII #49

2023 ж. 11 Мам.
2 070 505 Рет қаралды

Growing up in Germany, Wolfram Forster watched as Adolf Hitler rose to power and launched his country into the Second World War. Before long Wolfram would be called upon to serve, eventually engaging in combat against the American and British Armed Forces.
Purchase Dr. Forster's book "Farewell, Berlin" here:
www.amazon.com/Farewell-Berli...
Memoirs of WWII Website: bit.ly/2w60kGM
Patreon: bit.ly/2HIebIN
Instagram: bit.ly/2FBGBhv
Facebook: bit.ly/2w5Lhgf
Twitter: bit.ly/2jlcp1A
Written and Directed by Hudson Louie and Joshua Scott
Filmed by Heather Scott
Edited by Hudson Louie and Joshua Scott
Post Audio by Lane Tarr
Photo Enhancement and Colorization by Hudson Louie
Archive Footage Sources:
www.archives.gov/
Norris Aeroworks
Archive Photo Sources:Voice Of America
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Ministry of Defense of Ukraine
Primary Musical Score Source:
artlist.io/
Artlist Songs and Composers:
“Skies Above” by Caleb Etheridge
“Coming Back” by Yehezkel Raz
“Dark Tension” by Kyle Preston
“This Place” by Ben Winwood
“Nacht Oder Nie” performed by Walther Ludwig Heute, acquired from www.archive.org

Пікірлер
  • So similar to my Grandfather. Fought in the German Wehrmacht in WW2, Came to America after the war only to fight in Korea. He flew an American flag in his yard until the day he died in 98. RIP Grandpa.

    @Jeff-fc3tw@Jeff-fc3tw11 ай бұрын
    • Looks as though your grandad appreciated America good to read

      @seanohare5488@seanohare548811 ай бұрын
    • Omg!

      @abhisekhkumar4948@abhisekhkumar494811 ай бұрын
    • He was a hero

      @seductivesnake1@seductivesnake111 ай бұрын
    • ​@@EddieJackson-xl2jp not everyone who fought in the German army during WWII was a nazi... the Wehrmacht was not the SS...

      @JonathanH1253@JonathanH125311 ай бұрын
    • glad to know he found redemption i'm korean fyi

      @cydzview@cydzview11 ай бұрын
  • Whenever my grandpa told me this story he cried. He was a small child when Germans occupied Greece and he was hiding with the family in the mountains. One day they sent him to sneak in our house and find food, anything. Two SS soldiers caught him - the blond one yelled something in German, pointed his rifle and loaded a shot. The black haired SS looked at him with softer eyes, extended his arm and lowered the other soldier's rifle. He then gestured my grandfather to run away, which he did. He told me he never forgot their faces, decades later. That moment froze inside him. It's crazy when I think that I exist this day because that SS soldier extended his arm and stopped his colleague.

    @grafficacma@grafficacma10 ай бұрын
    • Beautifully and well said. It is sad to read.

      @prometheus_78@prometheus_785 ай бұрын
    • Damn nazi

      @edg.brandon@edg.brandon5 ай бұрын
    • Ah yes, the blonde was bad guy and black haired was good guy, huh? And it’s important to mention that part right? #JewishPropaganda

      @charlesg7926@charlesg79265 ай бұрын
    • The Japanese did the same to my grandma when the Japanese invaded China

      @AAA-hz7fh@AAA-hz7fh4 ай бұрын
    • Was this in Crete your grandfather? I lived in Crete for a year when I was in the US Navy and I remember visiting the allied cemetery there

      @drewdelaney4166@drewdelaney41664 ай бұрын
  • My Grandfather got spotted while on recon and had a group 4 German soldiers ask him to come out from hiding, alone under his jeep, so they could surrender. The saddest moment he ever shared was of comforting a wounded 'enemy' who did not make it. We owe that generation so much.

    @BillStoppard@BillStoppard9 ай бұрын
    • There were stories from the Desert Storm that were similar.

      @Rockhound6165@Rockhound61658 ай бұрын
    • That is the greatest generation, my grandfather served. Also in WWII, he’s passed away already, but I think he would be rolling in his grave, just a think what we as Americans are going through with a man like Donald J Trump, spitting image of Hitler. It’s so sad.

      @moisesperez4605@moisesperez46058 ай бұрын
    • @@moisesperez4605 that's A) off topic, and B) not even true lol. I'm guessing you're far left by saying this but come on dude. Also you typed this 3 days ago, I don't know if internet explorer has updated yet, but Biden's in the white house right now, not Trump. Just leave shit alone, Jesus. you gonna ignore Biden's clueless dumbassery like that then?

      @timoconnell5804@timoconnell58048 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Rockhound6165 Bitter irony. GIs, including my grandfather risked their lives to destroy fascism, and 1/3rd of our country blindly worships a McDonald's-swallowing fascist...

      @nukeputin420@nukeputin4208 ай бұрын
    • @@nukeputin420 Joe Biden eats McDonald's?

      @Rockhound6165@Rockhound61658 ай бұрын
  • I have read a number of memoirs and seen a number of interviews from ww2 veterans from all sides. And they all share a link in common. Every. Single. One. said something to this effect: "I am proud of my service, but NEVER again." This is the real and most valuable lesson these elders teach us. Those who want war are always the ones who are unwilling to fight them.

    @dangernuzzles4568@dangernuzzles45683 ай бұрын
    • This man fought as a Nazi then an American what an incredible story!!

      @Anybodywannapeanut3@Anybodywannapeanut32 ай бұрын
    • Wars are for old men who don't have to fight and young men who don't yet know the horror.

      @dicksargent3582@dicksargent35822 ай бұрын
    • @@Anybodywannapeanut3Not sure if he fought as a „Nazi“. Of course many Germans at the time were Maui’s but I don’t think most of them were dedicated ones, more like the normal person doing what is opportune to do in society to be a part of it.

      @NathanielGarr0_96@NathanielGarr0_96Ай бұрын
  • I met an elderly German man, maybe 92 or 93 years old, living in America about a decade ago. I couldn’t miss the opportunity since there were so few WW2 veterans left to speak to, so as respectfully as I could, I asked him, “Did you fight in the war?” He grinned slightly and raised his eyebrows and said in a thick accent, “Yes… the for *other* side!” I said, “Wow, you must have some interesting stories.” And his smile faded, and he said, “No… No stories.”

    @rxw5520@rxw552011 ай бұрын
    • It's such a shame...some were just men doing what a tyrant told them

      @revenanthate9030@revenanthate903011 ай бұрын
    • Im come from a country who fight it last "international" war between 1879-1884. Long time ago. Two brothers of my grandather's grandfather fought in that war. One of them was embarked on a warship who was in some brutal naval battles, including one when the enemy main flagship was captured. He had medals and ribbons for that, but is told that when someone ask him about the stories of the war, he always said the same, with sad eyes. "No stories".

      @magosmechanicus4407@magosmechanicus440711 ай бұрын
    • ​@@revenanthate9030every leader can be considered a tyrant. Don't forget, not a single country did a single thing when Germany was liquidated the Jews

      @billysmith9126@billysmith912611 ай бұрын
    • ​@@revenanthate9030 a tyrant that was voted by a majority of germans* be clear.

      @vertox78@vertox7811 ай бұрын
    • tough memories some are just incapable of speaking of. no shame with that

      @utpharmboy2006@utpharmboy200611 ай бұрын
  • This is why you can't automatically condemn any soldier just because they are on the opposite side. Alot of soldiers on both sides aren't there because they want to be.

    @johncapewell7520@johncapewell752010 ай бұрын
    • I always try to imagine myself in their place and realise i would probably be to afraid to refuse,brainwashed or just focused on surviving and not thinking about the bigger pictures Easy to say "i would have" but not so easy to actually do

      @Destroyer120296@Destroyer1202969 ай бұрын
    • @@Destroyer120296 Thats exactly what I do, you have to try and forget anything to do with your own life and situation and put yourself in their shoes. If I was forced to go and fight a war that I was against but my family and myself could be at risk of imprisonment or worse if I didn't go then I think I would go and fight the war.

      @johncapewell7520@johncapewell75209 ай бұрын
    • @@johncapewell7520 My grandfather was too young to be drafted into WW2. He was born in 1930 on august 25. He died on February 15 2023 at ripe age of 92. What he witnessed contrary to after war belief is that Partisans slaughtered a man in open field for not providing enough food for the communist party. Funny part is my grandfather believed in communist ideology, just some 10 year before he died he realized how much of a scam the whole shit has been. The top brass has been fucking actresses, ballerinas, models and so on. Drinking cognac, whiskey and expensive vine. While regular communists had a stable low paying job leading to nowhere financed by loans. And it broke apart long before 1991 when civil war broke out.

      @Nood424@Nood4249 ай бұрын
    • People who say stuff like "All Nazi soldiers were evil bad people" or "I would have refused to fight if I was them" are fools who lack critical thinking skills. To think some kid that got conscripted to fight a war is evil is just plain ignorant, nearly everyone in that position would do the same thing.

      @ChrisM-bn5vr@ChrisM-bn5vr9 ай бұрын
    • No one is forcing them to kill other people. If many are following orders of a few and youre one of them, youre just another fool at the front line.

      @TheNietrzezwy@TheNietrzezwy9 ай бұрын
  • My great grandfather was an ambulance driver in the Army in Finland (I'm born and raised in Sweden) during WWII and their wars with the Soviet Union. I never had the chance to meet and get to know him, but my grandmother told me that he used to have horrible nightmares, screaming and sweating as he woke up. He had to chainsmoke cigarettes to be able to calm down. I can't even imagine what horrors he must have seen and experienced! He didn't care if he tended to a comrade or a Soviet prisoner of war. If he had some bread to share with them for example, he did❤ R.I.P. Great grandfather Emil

    @rebeccasjodal9769@rebeccasjodal97693 ай бұрын
  • My loved Grandpa Willhelm from Hamburg was fighting at the Westernfront. In my Childhood he tell me horrible war Storys. At this Time in my Age i cant realize . I Know from my Father my Grandpa often screams and cry in and After nightmares. He was a Broken man. I have tears in my eyes to write this down. He was the lovliest an best Person i Ever knew. The Angel of the whole Familiy. In the year 2000 he lost the fight against Cancer. Im miss him and my Grandma so much. She lived in Hamburg at the Time of Operation Gomora. The Storys of her were frightened as Hell. WAR is terrible

    @Eimsbush1986@Eimsbush19863 ай бұрын
    • My condolences.

      @barbaralockwood2115@barbaralockwood21157 сағат бұрын
    • Thank you Barbara ❤

      @Eimsbush1986@Eimsbush19867 сағат бұрын
  • His story about the trial for a man who was sentenced to death for just being worried really hit me. 😢

    @TheMasonK@TheMasonK11 ай бұрын
    • Mason: That's why there needs to be checks and balances at the very start. Once one side has total power these things can and will happen. MAGA or a supporter could be a future target.

      @jgstargazer@jgstargazer11 ай бұрын
    • Like how the one guy being imprisoned for posting memes about Hillary Clinton. Biden administration is following in the steps of totalitarianism it seems like he’s arresting all political opponents.

      @shiriese@shiriese11 ай бұрын
    • @@jgstargazer Lmao you really just said maga could be targets like it isn’t the side that is plagued with and rubs shoulders with overt neo-nazi groups

      @josephdontworryaboutit4495@josephdontworryaboutit449511 ай бұрын
    • The USA is headed in that direction if we don't wake up

      @terryglovier5803@terryglovier580311 ай бұрын
    • @@jgstargazer looks like white people in general will be the target in America soon. You can see it building up to that. Not like it happens over night. Slowly working their way towards it

      @donjuan8124@donjuan812411 ай бұрын
  • The Eastern front was for the Germans a living hell. My grandpa, as a Hungarian, went there in January '45 with 100 men at that time. He as one of the two that survived. He is still going strong today!

    @jessemat7553@jessemat755310 ай бұрын
    • Dude, how old is he? You should write his stories and share it with the world.

      @unclekenny1127@unclekenny112710 ай бұрын
    • @@unclekenny1127 He is from 1930. He went there as a 15 year old. Believe it or not but he's still in competitions for table tennis 😜. There is a book on progress of his life, but a program like 'Memoirs of WWII' would be much more educative

      @jessemat7553@jessemat755310 ай бұрын
    • @@jessemat7553 Wow, he's into table tennis competitions! Now I want to learn to play that. Haha. Interesting stuff.

      @unclekenny1127@unclekenny112710 ай бұрын
    • Thank him for his valiant effort fighting on the right side .

      @Rumpleforeskin77@Rumpleforeskin7710 ай бұрын
    • @@Rumpleforeskin77 you mean the nazi were the right side?

      @frawi790@frawi79010 ай бұрын
  • In 1973 i was stationed in Germany where my first child was born. My in-laws came to visit and my FIL was a WWII vet. One evening he went exploring around Gieblestadt. My MIL had me go look for him and I found him in a local Gasthouse sitting at the Stammtisch hoisting brews with some old German soldiers and swapping war stories. What a sight.

    @michaelnoneya7342@michaelnoneya73428 ай бұрын
    • What a heartwarming story, which made me tear-up. Both your father-in-law and German WWII vets were boys fighting a war, not of their making. The WWII generation exhibits wonderful humanity by the way they live/lived, for their bravery, patriotism and willingness to forgive. They are “The Greatest Generation.”

      @denisek292@denisek2923 ай бұрын
    • 🤨. Sounds like he was fraternizing with the enemy. Not cool.

      @sec9788@sec97883 ай бұрын
    • @@sec9788what rubbish are you talking about ?

      @moniquedelaney7958@moniquedelaney79583 ай бұрын
    • ​@@denisek292Sad ! That the Imperialist , Fascist , Japanese soldier didn't receive much of any sympathy , empathy for their brutal , fanatical / tenacious fighting on , not just the hellish , bloody island hopping , and Asian Mainland fighting too !!

      @HappyPoppyFlowers-nr4jh@HappyPoppyFlowers-nr4jh2 ай бұрын
    • @@sec9788Can you shut up to just enjoy a good story.

      @Thatdragon2011@Thatdragon20112 ай бұрын
  • I had the supreme honor of meeting Dr. Forster and designing his book for him. His story is unbelievable, how he escaped certain death a number of times, including during his time in various prison camps after the war. The story of how he reunited with his parents is one of the most touching moments I’ve ever read. Dr Forster is a wonderful, wise, and kind gentleman, and I highly recommend his book. You won’t be able to put it down.

    @darleneschneck@darleneschneck7 ай бұрын
    • Name of book?

      @pippa212@pippa2126 ай бұрын
    • @@pippa212 "Farewell, Berlin"

      @loery@loery3 ай бұрын
    • @@loery That is so funny in the sense that I can still detect his Berlin accent (I´m German, but very far from Berlin, but love the accent). I have been looking for a comment that reveals his home town to see if Berlin was correct. Thank you for providing the title.

      @Punki80@Punki802 ай бұрын
  • Interesting memoir...reminds me of my grandfather....he was a German pilot in training in 1945...only 16 years old. The Luftwaffe forced him into a Bf 109, gave him no ammo, and was told to act as a "shield" following behind the experienced pilots so they wouldn't get shot down. Well, he got shot down on his second mission by a Russian fighter. He crash landed in eastern Germany which was under Russian occupation as they moved on Berlin. He said he escaped capture and made his way to the US where he drove a commuter bus in New Jersey for the rest of his life. I asked him why he chose that occupation. He told me because it was "A quiet job"....and in his humorous way that because, "Buses are hard to shoot down".

    @ES-lh1tj@ES-lh1tj11 ай бұрын
    • That is quite a story. Hats off to your grandpa. Hope he is having a good quiet time. 🙂

      @serpentines6356@serpentines63569 ай бұрын
    • Its one thing to get shot at. Its another to get at it the sky and without the ability to fight back. Brave man

      @Brian-ux3jx@Brian-ux3jx9 ай бұрын
    • That terrible and cowardly that they would use a sixteen year old boy as a human shield.

      @tiffanygrever8092@tiffanygrever80929 ай бұрын
    • @@tiffanygrever8092 you do realize you're talking about nazi Germany right? That's the least cowardly thing they did

      @jlo7770@jlo77709 ай бұрын
    • @@jlo7770 oh believe me I know there rap sheet but these stories still shock me the depth of how low they would go.

      @tiffanygrever8092@tiffanygrever80929 ай бұрын
  • They really need to interview Hugo Broch. He's the last surviving German ww2 flying Ace. He is currently 101 years old. (Edit): Hey wow didn't expect this comment to get so many likes. If anyone knows how to contact him that would be amazing. To the people in the comments below arguing about the war I'd recommend the book "A thousand shall fall" by Susi Hasel Mundy. It's a true story is about a man who served in the Pioneers in the German Wehrmacht in WW2. Like the Desmond Doss story he never carried a gun in combat. Franz hasel, a 40-year-old pacifist, was drafted and assigned to Pioneer Company 699, Hitler's elite troops who built bridges at the front lines. He carried a blackened piece of wood in his holster the entire war and would warn jews before the SS got to them on the eastern front. Not every German in the army believed the propaganda or wanted the war. This book is a great example of that. It also dives into his wife's experiences back at home and the hard choices they had to make as civilians.

    @jimmersion3808@jimmersion380811 ай бұрын
    • Thats got to be so hard to get access to someone like that. Hard to believe he's still alive.

      @msau9747@msau974711 ай бұрын
    • @@msau9747 Surprised he isn’t behind bars

      @hudsonumi@hudsonumi11 ай бұрын
    • @@hudsonumiwhy should he be behind bars?

      @hblock8361@hblock836111 ай бұрын
    • @@hudsonumi for what

      @Wycher@Wycher11 ай бұрын
    • @@hudsonumi not all Germans in ww2 commit war crimes

      @huytran6696@huytran669611 ай бұрын
  • Before my father passed away at 90 years old, he started talking about his experiences, as a kid living just outside Amsterdam, and the German occupation of the Netherlands. The things he witnessed are mind boggling. Let's keep the memories alive.

    @John-hs2xx@John-hs2xx8 ай бұрын
    • but the Germans treated Dutch people well, didn´t they? as they regarded Dutch and other ethinicities similar to them.

      @Supernova1.980@Supernova1.9808 ай бұрын
    • @@Supernova1.980 Short answer: NO.

      @John-hs2xx@John-hs2xx8 ай бұрын
    • Ok@@John-hs2xx

      @Supernova1.980@Supernova1.9808 ай бұрын
    • Short answer. Many collaborated more than willingly and also delivered Jews wherever they could. Dutch love to present themselves as angels which they were by no means.

      @Lazendra@Lazendra5 ай бұрын
    • @@LazendraWe’re (USA) funding a war in a CERTAIN part of the world with a CERTAIN group of people…I think reparations have been made.

      @sec9788@sec97883 ай бұрын
  • When I was a kid one of my neighbors from across the street was a US Navy "lifer" who served twenty years and he was at Pearl Harbor on that fateful day. One summer afternoon when I was a teenager he invited me inside his kitchen and told me stories of that day and he even had pictures. He was a living, breathing history book who actually lived through it. I'll never forget the hour I spent listening to his stories and sharing the historic photos with me. RIP, (Bill) Mr Weidmaier.

    @hondaphan4172@hondaphan41725 ай бұрын
  • Became a doctor, and served in the us army after all that. Much respect

    @shieldranger1368@shieldranger136811 ай бұрын
    • the US army, starting fake wars for 100 years..... Vietnam was a hoax, Iraq was a hoax, Afghanistan was a hoax. let me quote General Patton before he was murdered, "we fought for the wrong side"

      @steveb6718@steveb671810 ай бұрын
    • @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist2true

      @questionableclips@questionableclips10 ай бұрын
    • traitor

      @Toujeo@Toujeo10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Toujeostfu

      @ricardofernando5617@ricardofernando561710 ай бұрын
    • @@Toujeoagreed

      @wunderwaffe7998@wunderwaffe799810 ай бұрын
  • Simply amazing that he survived the war then to become a US citizen and ultimately serve our country and rise through the ranks to become a Colonel....utmost respect sir! Amazing story and thank you for your service and dedication to your community and country... Hand Salute

    @Zipgun66@Zipgun6611 ай бұрын
    • I salute with you

      @opoxious1592@opoxious159211 ай бұрын
    • As do I.

      @SoCal780@SoCal78011 ай бұрын
    • 🖐🏻

      @Nick_B_Bad@Nick_B_Bad11 ай бұрын
    • "Hand salute"........what kind? 🤔

      @broflo3875@broflo387511 ай бұрын
    • @@broflo3875 Offcourse the Global salute

      @opoxious1592@opoxious159211 ай бұрын
  • My german grandma was a child who had to look after her 2 younger siblings while her mum worked. Her dad never returned from the war. They had to flee their home when the russians attacked. They chose boat rather than fleeing in winter on foot. Most who did died from the cold and the russian bombs. She saw the boat that she had missed hit by something and sink, saw the bodies floating while on her boat. She ended up moving to the UK and getting married to my english grandad. Neither are still here. I loved her very much.

    @Thorinsfriend@Thorinsfriend8 ай бұрын
    • Because Russian soldiers were not protected by the Geneva Convention, as British and American soldiers were, the Russian POW's were treated appallingly, many met the same fate as the jews. So when the Russians invaded, they were told they could do what they liked in Germany.

      @adambrocklehurst4211@adambrocklehurst42117 ай бұрын
    • @@adambrocklehurst4211 Stalin's regime was responsible for 50 million deaths across Russia and Europe and they were brutal everywhere they went.

      @laurenking5342@laurenking53424 ай бұрын
    • @@adambrocklehurst4211the Russian weren’t saint. And to be frank by that time when the Russian invaded, the Russian government was already the Bolshevik running it. Massive numbers of Europeans were killed by the Russians (from east to west)

      @aizac91@aizac913 ай бұрын
  • Hearing these stories brings tears to my eyes, I can’t fathom the horrors of those wars. God bless them.

    @Ctrl_Alt_Delete_Yourself@Ctrl_Alt_Delete_Yourself8 ай бұрын
    • this story..it's so strange.. I have heard it before, nearly 1 to 1 from my great-uncle - conscripted the same year at the same age, father served in WW1, sent to the western front, from the same region in Germany, very similar surrender story 'when the Americans arrived, just hands up, that was it', returned the same year in '46, also went to the countryside after for a bit, even the glasses in the background of the video stand in a similarly outfitted cupboard in his house... the lucky ones of that generation all went through the same thing

      @johnkirk1772@johnkirk17728 ай бұрын
    • God bless Nazis??? What God is that? It's for sure not the God of the Jewish people!

      @davidhess6593@davidhess6593Ай бұрын
  • My uncle was conscripted nearing the end of WWII at the age of 16. When they boarded the train. the trainstation was bombed and they fled from the train. He and a few others hid in the woods for several weeks untill the war finally ended. Those who returned and went to the frontline, were never to come home again. My uncle is now close to 94 and still alive to tell of it.

    @tinalisapattern@tinalisapattern11 ай бұрын
    • And today Ukraine grabbing 16 year old boys off the street to go die rather than negotiate for peace. Disgraceful waste.

      @josephback-upaccount6116@josephback-upaccount611611 ай бұрын
    • Try and get him interviewed!

      @Dulex123@Dulex12311 ай бұрын
    • Coward.

      @donny303@donny30311 ай бұрын
    • He was fighting for the good guys bless him

      @Rumpleforeskin77@Rumpleforeskin7710 ай бұрын
    • He was smart and did the right thing. Hitler and his thugs were not worth dying for.

      @strfltcmnd.9925@strfltcmnd.992510 ай бұрын
  • Its crazy how time goes by, as a kid in the early 90s there plenty of ww2 vets in their 70s and now theyre almost all gone. The Vietnam vets are now the age of the ww2 vets I remembered as a kid. These were all our parents and grandparents and the last of a generation and it's really depressing that this generation is dying out. I'm glad this channel is documenting it to keep their stories alive.

    @Mixwell1983@Mixwell198311 ай бұрын
    • very well said

      @katyusha2262@katyusha226210 ай бұрын
    • The young kids today won't even know this happened or just think it's like some kind of movie. Sad but they don't teach much in schools anymore. The further away we get from it, the more likely we are to repeat it.

      @brettb4452@brettb445210 ай бұрын
    • @@brettb4452 THey still teach plenty about WW2 in school, although here in the US, it mainly focuses on the American part of the story.

      @travguy3626@travguy362610 ай бұрын
    • Losing this generation is very evident in our politics today. The hunger for conflict is still there despite the horrors these people endured.

      @johnboy14@johnboy1410 ай бұрын
    • Perfectly stated

      @josephvega3763@josephvega376310 ай бұрын
  • My godfather who raised me was in the Navy in WWII. He had so many intense and fascinating stories. He passed away in 2018 at the age of 98. RIP Bob 💙

    @Celeste_92@Celeste_928 ай бұрын
  • Made me cry, this story. There are no winners in war. So many lives of our dear people were lost in this brutality. War is always best avoided. Glad this man's life was not lost like so many others.

    @RedDesertRoz@RedDesertRoz7 ай бұрын
    • No no, USA and Russia won. Gloriously

      @Brandon-nr8fn@Brandon-nr8fn7 ай бұрын
  • I’m glad you guys are interviewing the German perspective. We don’t get enough of a perspective from their side. I’m not talking about the politics but the average Wehrmacht soldier who fought for their country not for its leaders.

    @bobafett1313@bobafett131311 ай бұрын
    • The German leaders also fought for their country.

      @brantdanger@brantdanger11 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@brantdanger am sure you understand what he meant, dont try twisting his words to fit your view.

      @thegrizzbear7593@thegrizzbear759311 ай бұрын
    • They did fight for their government and rightfully so. It's been 80 years. Time to start telling the truth about that conflict.

      @revolution1423@revolution142311 ай бұрын
    • @@revolution1423 Many fought because they had to, late into the war Hitler forced a draft upon the German people forcing boys younger than 18 to fight. They HAD to fight or they would be traitors. All Germans were not evil as the history books would tell you. Just like all allied troops were not saints.

      @bobafett1313@bobafett131311 ай бұрын
    • @@revolution1423 The “truth” or what you want to hear? WWII is one of the most documented conflicts in history with easily accessible accounts from all sides. The truth is widely known.

      @rinoking88@rinoking8810 ай бұрын
  • Until you walk a mile in this man's shoes you will never understand. After watching this video, it brought tears to my eyes because this man reminded me of someone, someone who I can't stop thinking about till this day! I was in the US Army in between 1989 to 1993 and in 1990, I was in Kaiserslautern Germany in a pub along with a friend. We were both 18 at the time and we were sitting up at the bar when I noticed an older man a few seats away on my right staring at me and my friend. The man looked to be in his mid 60's or so at the time and then he spoke to us. He said, "Are you American soldiers?" and clearly I could tell this man was German by his accent and I told him that we were American Soldiers. The man then said, "Thank you for what you young boys are doing and thank you for being here!" We thanked him and both me and my friend were still trying to figure out who this man was. He then told us that he was a former German Nazi Soldier during WWII and he told us how sorry he was for the things he has done and he said that there hasn't been a day gone by in his life that he doesn't have regrets. He said he was our age at the time, scared and only did what he was supposed to do and if he refused he would be killed. I told the man that he doesn't have to apologize to me or my friend. I told him we're just kids and we have no idea what you had to go through and we weren't here to judge him. The man continued to talk with us for the rest of the night, buying me and my friend beers and then it was time to go. We shook his hand and then left. When we walked outside I told my friend, "We just graduated high school not too long ago and to think, we just got the best history lesson of our lives tonight!" I am 51 now, I think about this man from time to time. I wonder if he was able to live a somewhat happy and fruitful life but it was clear at the time, the man had many regrets. I am sure some of you will judge him and maybe me for that matter but I am the one that experienced this and this sit down and he was the one who experienced what it was like to be so unfortunate to be an 18 year old male kid during that time. God Bless all who fought during WWII and rest in piece!

    @ArizonaGunsDave@ArizonaGunsDave11 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for sharing this, may that man Rest In Peace. Did you get his name?

      @PK__44@PK__4411 ай бұрын
    • @@PK__44 Honestly I don’t remember if I did and I forgot or if he did at all it was a long time ago but he was a very nice man.

      @ArizonaGunsDave@ArizonaGunsDave11 ай бұрын
    • I also got to meet German WW ll veterans when I was in the Berlin Brigade 88-92 to include my ex- girlfriend dad who survived the entire war drafted in 38 survived the Eastern front only to be captured in Berlin by the Soviet army he spent several years in a Soviet prison. Joining the new German army and retired in 72 one hell of a man. I don't know how in the hell he survived.

      @ernestpaniagua1210@ernestpaniagua121011 ай бұрын
    • We were road marching to Graf and an old man gave us the peace sign. Cool that was 83 or 84 Lt Col Tommy R Franks Commanding

      @josephhudson8829@josephhudson882911 ай бұрын
    • @@ernestpaniagua1210 The mind can be very tough, the will to survive where many say F it and give up and just die

      @m42037@m4203711 ай бұрын
  • My grandfather was a WW2 concentration lair prisoner and survived because he was an engeneer and could build radios for the germans. He never spoke about the war, would tie up and become blank when thinking about it. I've only heard some stories of what he went through, death of his friends, starvation, death and disease everywhere.

    @KappaClaus@KappaClaus8 ай бұрын
    • My grandfather escaped Poland but his brother was killed in auschwitz and first wife killed by the Russians. He went through hell and so did his kids.

      @myview2543@myview25434 ай бұрын
    • I’m so sorry for what your grandfather saw and endured…it’s unimaginable. He lived, and it’s a blessing you are his living legacy.

      @denisek292@denisek2923 ай бұрын
    • @@myview2543 I’m so sorry for your family’s tragic losses. My great-grandfather lived on the German/Polish border. He immigrated to America in the late 19th century. Unfortunately, his brother stayed-behind. Family members were split-up, and sent to various concentration camps, where most perished. The Holocaust tortured and killed innocents, but its evil denied us the joy and love lost from their deaths.

      @denisek292@denisek2923 ай бұрын
  • Capturing these stories is truly a calling. Thank you for sharing.

    @ShimitBlast@ShimitBlast2 ай бұрын
  • My father taught radar, an emerging technology in WW2. He couldn't talk about it for 50 years bc of Official Secrets Act. Radar had a huge impact on the war. There is a neglected radar museum in London Ontario Airport which he helped to create. He passed in 2021 at age 100.

    @njcanuck@njcanuck10 ай бұрын
    • How old are you if your father is 102 in 2023?

      @ayn30@ayn308 ай бұрын
    • Your father did a great thing. He helped hold back the tide of darkness that was Germany. If it wasn't for him and the millions of others who came from afar to save Europe, the world would be a darker place.

      @jackdoyle7453@jackdoyle74538 ай бұрын
    • My ex-neighbor's FIL also did something similar in the US. He traveled around the country taking his wife and child with him installing and teaching the military about it. At war's end they were in CA where he stayed til '48 or '49. The military wanted him to 'join up' with a COL's commission but he refused since he was in his 40s - an engineer, too set in his ways (you know engineers), etc. He may have been working for Bendix - I've forgotten.

      @richardw3470@richardw34707 ай бұрын
    • thats a myth, the only huge impact are the millions of soviets that gave their life... he says it on the video... going east was death, its like ppl cant understand the magnitude of eastern front...

      @marcos14223@marcos142236 ай бұрын
    • I hope my sons and I can see that museum one day. Your dad must have been a brilliant man. ❤

      @jscho8674@jscho86746 ай бұрын
  • At the History of Germany museum there's an exhibition about war orphans. There are pictures of children found alone wandering the streets. Some people found as toddlers and no one knew who they are and their parents were most likely deceased. They were given a names by the Red Cross and their last name is the village where they were found. There are people around who don't know anything who they were: their name, their age, their real birthday... they have no idea. I can't imagine .

    @AdZS848@AdZS84810 ай бұрын
    • Strikes me they are better off, than to grow raised by nazis.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • 😢

      @wendyshaddick9314@wendyshaddick93148 ай бұрын
    • This is what breaks my heart. No kid should ever have to go through what those kids went through. And their situation was not unique. This literally happened all over Europe and in Asia as well-countless kids lost their families due to acts of violence.

      @flannerymonaghan-morris4825@flannerymonaghan-morris48258 ай бұрын
    • Here are some other facts about German soldiers kzhead.info/sun/bKajeb2DqGZ5iaM/bejne.html

      @tomaszpin.355@tomaszpin.3558 ай бұрын
    • Children like that are also very exposed to exploitation in everything from child labour to sexual workers unfortunately💔😭

      @rebeccasjodal9769@rebeccasjodal97693 ай бұрын
  • My grandmother lived in Rotterdam during the was. The family was starving, and sent my grandmother to get potatoes from the trainstation. When she was trying to get some potatoes, she had to slam the side and hope for a potatoe to fall of. When she did this, she heard a click behind her. It was a German soldier clocked his rifle. When he looked at the small girl, he put his finger in front of his mouth to tell her to be quiet. He then slammed his hand against the train cart and she got as many potatoes as she could carry. Saved her family and thats why i am here!! There are good in the world......

    @bwemmie007@bwemmie0073 ай бұрын
    • Love this story, thanks for sharing

      @hermannjoseph@hermannjoseph3 ай бұрын
  • God bless you & your family for sharing these stories. Thank you for not allowing a huge piece of history to slip through our fingers.

    @franksimek6949@franksimek69496 ай бұрын
  • My grandfather is 99 and served in both ww2 and the Korean War as an MP. Although he never saw combat - fortunately, he has an incredible story having grown up in the dust bowl, losing everything as a result of that disaster, and then building a career in the Army. He would love to share his story if you were interested.

    @christopherdavis2793@christopherdavis279311 ай бұрын
    • Please thanks him for his service, I wish I could meet one of these heroes, they truely are tje Greatest Generation. Forever will I be grateful for his service and sacrifices. A Generation we stay in depth in greater than numbers. To those whogave their live, perished, and those who are still living among usGod Bless you, . God bless the Greatest Generation!

      @kelvinsurname7051@kelvinsurname705111 ай бұрын
    • Thank the great generation not many are still with us, if it wasn't for them we wouldn't be talking right now

      @m42037@m4203711 ай бұрын
    • No flighting during WW2? Perhaps as a non WW2 story about the dust bowl

      @watersbey25@watersbey2511 ай бұрын
    • Never saw combat? He was married, wasn't he?

      @STaeschner@STaeschner11 ай бұрын
    • @@m42037 If fools keep voting for democrats it will soon be the same in the states.

      @darrinrentruc6614@darrinrentruc661411 ай бұрын
  • My Opa fought in WWI for the Germans. After the war he emigrated to America. Hearing this story reminded me of him.

    @626pingj@626pingj11 ай бұрын
    • have he told you some stories from ww1?

      @mmmmmmmmfood@mmmmmmmmfood10 ай бұрын
    • Too bad he survived so you could be born and look up to nazis

      @Rigmor_Talonbeard@Rigmor_Talonbeard9 ай бұрын
    • Its entirely different; WW1 was a pointless waste of life mostly caused by elites either wanting a war or being too indifferent to stop it. Soldiers fighting for Germany in WW1 weren't fighting on behalf of evil.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • ​@@JD1010101110Neither were they in ww2

      @kalajari1749@kalajari17499 ай бұрын
    • @@kalajari1749 No, in WW2 they were fighting to wipe out the Jewish people and enslave the world.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
  • I'm so thankful for what ya'll are doing. I went to some of the local colleges at two VA hospitals and asked if we could get some of the students to record the WWII Veteran's stories and was always met with a "no." I was able to record some stories and had Veteran's family members give me transcripts that the Veteran had recorded. There are so many amazing stories that will never be known. The stories I have from fellow Veterans and my family members I will always cherish and tell at nauseum, so they are never forgotten.

    @Bene_Factum@Bene_Factum2 ай бұрын
  • He simply told it like it was, no glory or hype. Much respect for those like him

    @user-ie5rr7mj9u@user-ie5rr7mj9u3 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been on a WW2 history binge the last few months and weirdly enough, the more I learn about the war, the more anxious I feel with the knowledge that the last survivors of it won’t be here for much longer. You don’t know how relieved I am to see their stories being documented. The most respectful (and responsible) thing we can do for them is to NEVER forget what they sacrificed so that we and our children never have to do the same.

    @Alex-kd5xc@Alex-kd5xc11 ай бұрын
    • Sadly, too many have forgotten what our forefathers fought and died for and now, Russia threatens to reignite an ember that could turn once again to rolling flame for years.

      @MrRedeyedJedi@MrRedeyedJedi11 ай бұрын
    • Pop a name on a marble wall and have a minute silence is how we remember our dead in the U.K. a load of bollocks if you ask me considering people can’t even name 20 Of the fallen in the war on terror let alone those who died between now and the retreat from Kabul for example. People die to be nameless biomass in our mind.

      @spookyt8692@spookyt869211 ай бұрын
    • @@MrRedeyedJedi Its a US proxy war

      @normalizedinsanity4873@normalizedinsanity487311 ай бұрын
    • The US has been slaughtering innocent pewople for 20 years

      @normalizedinsanity4873@normalizedinsanity487311 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MrRedeyedJediits America at fault.

      @philmitchellboxing8661@philmitchellboxing866111 ай бұрын
  • Definitely would like to see something from the Italian or Japanese perspective.

    @joshuaperrin3910@joshuaperrin391011 ай бұрын
    • I was just thinking the same thing

      @patrickfreeman8257@patrickfreeman825711 ай бұрын
    • There are actually plenty of documentaries out there of Italian soldiers on KZhead

      @endo4137@endo413711 ай бұрын
    • There is one specific book on Audible books by an Italian soldier. It will surprise you how poorly they were treated by the Germans. Mildly interesting

      @American4UAF@American4UAF11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@American4UAF mildly aha first time herd that xD

      @Poetry4Peace@Poetry4Peace11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@American4UAFthey deserved it

      @alejo7625@alejo762511 ай бұрын
  • I think I could spend my entire life reading and watching stuff about WW2. Amazing video.

    @robertoflores9080@robertoflores90805 ай бұрын
  • Incredible story , Incredible Human Being ❤ Hats off !! Love you Sir !!

    @padmalosan23@padmalosan238 ай бұрын
  • It is so nice to hear stories from all sides of the war not just the winning side. People so easily forget that the Germans were also just kids following orders like the allied soldiers and we are so quick to point fingers and compare them to the monsters that led them. Much respect to all veterans from all wars.

    @carelmalouf7375@carelmalouf737510 ай бұрын
    • I agree they where all soldiers doing what they thought was right and following orders

      @60trickpa@60trickpa10 ай бұрын
    • But we also need to remember that Hitler didn't get his power by force. He was elected.

      @Cyclerdam-qt8rx@Cyclerdam-qt8rx10 ай бұрын
    • I don't have any respect to Russian soldiers for what they did to my relatives and country during 50 years ocuppation.

      @linasvaskys3383@linasvaskys338310 ай бұрын
    • Most people don’t understand that the Wehrmacht ≠ the SS

      @ThePmcderm91@ThePmcderm9110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ThePmcderm91 Even the SS isn't always the same. In the Beginn most SS-Men standing behind the Nazi ideals, but in the end many kids were forced into the SS.

      @dajo1373@dajo137310 ай бұрын
  • I was lucky and got so many stories from my grandfather, he was a submariner and was called up In 1941, I'm proud to say I have all his medals paper work and pictures, what a brave generation..thanks to all veterans

    @stevegribble8461@stevegribble84619 ай бұрын
    • Who are you thanking here? German veterans? for what defending nazi regime and the holocaust? for invading all of europe?

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • You have good reason to be proud of your grandfather, as he was a hero. It’s wonderful he shared his WWII experiences w/ you, and how cool to have his medals and war memorabilia. He was part of “The Greatest Generation.” Military personnel and veterans are true heroes: Without them, our freedoms would perish.

      @denisek292@denisek2923 ай бұрын
    • What was the name and side of the sub?My grandad did 7 patrols on Dace SS247

      @binoculord@binoculordАй бұрын
  • Hearing a story like this brought back lots of memories of listening to great grandfather talking about ww2 as a German soldier, i also wish I could’ve heard more stories from my great great grandfather who fought isn ww1… RIP to all the fallen

    @EightBucksTwenty@EightBucksTwenty7 ай бұрын
  • This is important work, well presented and narrated. I have donated through your website. Thank you for 'this' service!

    @mrdddeeezzzweldor5039@mrdddeeezzzweldor50397 ай бұрын
  • He reminds me of my grandfather who was a German horse soldier during World War I. He brought his family to the USA in 1923. My mother, born in Hannover, was two at the time. What a great man Mr. Forster is, to have accomplished so much in his lifetime. He's a truly great American.

    @robertwbingo@robertwbingo11 ай бұрын
  • Love hearing different perspectives of ww2. It’s crazy to me that he went from fighting against the allies for the nazi to serving in the U.S. military. Almost like mini operation paperclip.

    @stevemcneal7069@stevemcneal706911 ай бұрын
    • *_Lots of Nazis made it to the USA and became American citizens._*

      @jean6872@jean687211 ай бұрын
    • You shouldn't use the word "nazi" interchangeably with "German". It's like saying any American is a trumpanzee, it doesn't work that way.

      @dougerrohmer@dougerrohmer11 ай бұрын
    • @@dougerrohmer Comparing nazis to MAGA supporters is a big reach my dude very shocking you did that

      @WolfBlade706@WolfBlade70611 ай бұрын
    • @@WolfBlade706 That's not my point, but there are people who would compare the Munich Putsch and Capitol Hill insurrection to one another. My point was that you can't call everybody in a country by the same label as the bossman up in Berlin or Mar-i-Lago.

      @dougerrohmer@dougerrohmer11 ай бұрын
    • @@dougerrohmer Capital hill was an inside job 🙄

      @WolfBlade706@WolfBlade70611 ай бұрын
  • underrated channel, thank you for your stories

    @chomi6312@chomi63122 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing this story . I am very proud of my relationship with a Canadian WW2 veteran . He was on a Canadian ship that sunk a U-boat. He served as a commissioner for a local Navy unit in Vancouver . I lost contact with him but we had very good memories . Thank You Bruce !

    @Tonyscasa@Tonyscasa8 ай бұрын
  • Did my civil service taking care of elderly ppl in Germany. Heard so many war stories. My father was sent out in the Volkssturm at the age of 14.We have a memorial wall at our local cemetery where many WWII soldiers from here are buried saying"I memorial of those who died and a warning to those who live". To bad, ppl forget so easily...

    @HerrKaleu777@HerrKaleu77711 ай бұрын
  • They are all just men in the end, fighting for their country and for what they are told is right... history is written by the victors. Thank you for sharing, Wolfram.

    @GarrettsGear@GarrettsGear11 ай бұрын
    • 👌

      @KnockingONwood1111@KnockingONwood111111 ай бұрын
    • Exactly this. My great grandfather and great uncles fought in the Wehrmacht. All told a very different story than what's in the history books. In fact my grandfather often wouldn't talk about it "if I tell the truth I'll be arrested" he would say

      @midmichiganrr24gp9@midmichiganrr24gp911 ай бұрын
    • Tall this to the victim of holocaust… people like him cud been just soldier fighting for their home, but the story of wwII is something different

      @Marco-yv1fo@Marco-yv1fo11 ай бұрын
    • @@Marco-yv1fo there is no difference between the holocaust and what the new americans did to the native americans , america are hypocrites !

      @orion5813@orion581311 ай бұрын
    • @@Marco-yv1fo to be fair, it's both this and that and we all know it, I think

      @yehor_ivanov@yehor_ivanov11 ай бұрын
  • Such a gift. Thank you for recording this.

    @moniquebrown18@moniquebrown188 ай бұрын
  • Excellent production and presentation, thank you for honoring this man.

    @RuiBossTheOnly@RuiBossTheOnlyАй бұрын
  • That was the first time I watched a German soldier tell his story. And my heart broke for him as a boy. War is terrible for all involved. And my love, and respect, goes out to all the fallen regardless of what side you fought on. As they say. Death is the great equalizer of us all.

    @Xfonic@Xfonic10 ай бұрын
    • So your heart goes out to people who wanted to annhilate jewish people from this earth? hunt gay people, cleanse all the less than, and them kill anyone who stood in their way? NAZIS ARE BAD, PEOPLE WHO FIGHT FOR NAZIS ARE BAD. this shouldn't be a difficult thing to understand.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • And only the dead have seen the end of war.

      @alanroberts6663@alanroberts66638 ай бұрын
    • @@alanroberts6663 Not according to Christianity

      @jackdoyle7453@jackdoyle74538 ай бұрын
    • @@alanroberts6663 or norse mythology

      @jackdoyle7453@jackdoyle74538 ай бұрын
    • @@alanroberts6663 or Hinduism

      @jackdoyle7453@jackdoyle74538 ай бұрын
  • After all those years, the way he began to tear up about the letter from his mother.

    @davidbray2500@davidbray250011 ай бұрын
    • Did he shed a tear for the civilians they killed for getting in the way?

      @strfltcmnd.9925@strfltcmnd.992510 ай бұрын
    • @@strfltcmnd.9925 true that. I guess that’s war. So many civilians killed. Of interest, my Nan (in England during ww2) was walking down the St, she heard a plane screaming down and it was German, he fired at the crowd and the woman beside her was killed. For nothing. So senseless. I appreciate your opinion 👍

      @davidbray2500@davidbray250010 ай бұрын
    • @@strfltcmnd.9925 You heard what the man said. His mission was to enter the town and get the civillians out of there and also if you say the wrong thing you are dead. Not ever single soldier was hitler or a SS member. These are the civilians of Germany they had no choice to fight. Thats what a draft is.

      @kylemenos@kylemenos9 ай бұрын
    • Do you think she or he shed a tear for all the mothers and their children he went to kill for their Fuhrer??

      @marti6607@marti66079 ай бұрын
    • @@kylemenos To enter the town and get the civilians out of there?? Lol, bro, I'm from Poland and that's not what my granny who witnessed the German invasion told me, I can assure you there was no "evacuation" of civilians! In fact, go online and see what your beloved German soldiers did to Warsaw, the capital of Poland!

      @marti6607@marti66079 ай бұрын
  • A remarkably crisp personal account from a unique point of view. Excellent.

    @peterrollinson-lorimer@peterrollinson-lorimer5 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for bringing their stories to us. What you do is more important than you know, and the record of each indivworld. Personal history can now be shared with the worls.

    @charliecapo3442@charliecapo34425 ай бұрын
  • I am 70 this month and served my country for ten years in the 70's. Now, once again, as it has always been, one man is responsible for so much death and destruction of good people just trying to survive. I am glad you did Sir. We as a species need to change before time runs out. Respect to you.

    @abestm8@abestm811 ай бұрын
    • it wasn´t just one man back then and it is not just one man now. to really believe this is very naive.

      @weisthor0815@weisthor081511 ай бұрын
    • thank you for your service

      @Rumorr@Rumorr11 ай бұрын
    • It’s called the military industrial complex. The people who actually run things are nameless and faceless in the west, but hellbent on destruction

      @elonfux2492@elonfux249211 ай бұрын
    • There's never just "one man" responsible for so much death and destruction. That sounds like something a woman would say. Churchill and Roosevelt lied their people into another war with Germany. Stalin amassed a giant military (bolstered by the US) poised for invasion, but beaten to the punch with Operation Barbarossa. Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin - three complete bastards that caused unfathomable suffering.

      @brantdanger@brantdanger11 ай бұрын
  • And this is why I donate. You guys are one hell of a group of people. These stories could absolutely re-write history in some form or fashion. CHEERS!!

    @dbslanders5547@dbslanders554711 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for doing this. I’ve always wanted to talk to people who been there all the wars it doesn’t matter. They all have a story to tell so amazing I love history.

    @subnoizesoldier2@subnoizesoldier23 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for publishing this man's story. I had some vague understanding of that side of the war but it feels like the puzzle is complete.

    @boryagin@boryaginАй бұрын
  • The lesson of your work is to listen to the words of our elders, the people who've lived a life and learned it's lessons the hard way. No matter the country they come from, each has a story worth listening to. It's up to us to decide what we do with the stories they share. We are the ones who decide what our lives will be like today. Bravo on your work and thank you, Wolfram, for sharing your story.

    @imbok@imbok11 ай бұрын
  • Good to see a different perspective

    @jeremyjansen1932@jeremyjansen193211 ай бұрын
  • Such amazing work, this whole video! Much respect to this man, and thanks to the whole team who shot this.

    @t.m.-nm9ge@t.m.-nm9ge5 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate everything you guys are doing ❤️ keep up the good work

    @jamesryder1427@jamesryder14277 ай бұрын
  • I really enjoy hearing the other side's experience too.

    @crissipatterson4980@crissipatterson498011 ай бұрын
  • I'm so glad this channel exists. To hear all these stories that are so full of life and experience. The terrors and horrors, The great and good. Nothing is more valuable than history because it can't be replaced, only forgotten and with a wonderful channel like this, it gives us hope that it will never be forgotten. Thank you so much.

    @Sharkaiju@Sharkaiju11 ай бұрын
    • So many perspectives on a single topic. It seems endless.

      @Sharkaiju@Sharkaiju11 ай бұрын
    • war crimes by the american army must never be forgotten

      @bergmann.@bergmann.11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bergmann. so are war crimes of all armies. Don't just paint one cat black and ignore the rest. You must be dreaming.

      @davidtwliew616@davidtwliew61611 ай бұрын
  • Excellent memoir! Thank you for creating this content.

    @HomeSlize@HomeSlize8 ай бұрын
  • When he describes the moment he surrendered to the three G.I. When he realized he was a survivor and the war was over for him….it brought tears to my eyes. We are all humans 😢

    @tiffanyi5645@tiffanyi564511 ай бұрын
    • Except some people choose to be monsters and fight for evil. he should spent the rest of life in a cell.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • Not them though, they killed people for fun.

      @politicallyincorrect2564@politicallyincorrect25649 ай бұрын
    • @@JD1010101110 Are you American?

      @user-gl3yk9nm3r@user-gl3yk9nm3r7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-gl3yk9nm3rhes weird

      @tharoke8494@tharoke84943 ай бұрын
  • Omg, drafted November '44, my own Granpa was drafted for Wehrmacht December '44 one month after his 16th Birthday. It is so unreal to me, grown up in Peace, being forced to fight at such a young age. Kudos to Wolfram he is a brave man no matter which side he was on and his story deserves to be conserved!

    @jannis240891@jannis24089111 ай бұрын
    • No he is a coward and bully. No one is forced to do anything there is always a choice, to do right or do wrong. He fought for evil and if he had sucked at his job there would be no jewish people, no gay people, no utermensch...

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • He could have refused. And yes, it matters which side he was on. It matters very much. He was on the side of of the invaders, occupants, war criminals, monsters who committed some of the worst attrocities in human history. PURE EVIL. Neither your grandpa nor Wolfram are heros or victims. Trying to present then as such is like spitting in the office of the innocent victims of the Nazi German ideology, which the wider German population was supportive of. Deal with that.

      @marti6607@marti66079 ай бұрын
  • These videos are gems... After few more years, none would be there to tell first hand experience.

    @taitslong3417@taitslong34179 ай бұрын
  • Very respectful and well presented thank you. Thank you to all soldiers of the WWll as well as support staff.

    @deecawford@deecawford5 ай бұрын
  • I think it’s literally impossible to watch these kinds of videos regarding veterans on either side tell their stories and not shed tears of sadness. At least that’s what happens to me.

    @GT-mq1dx@GT-mq1dx11 ай бұрын
    • Remember he was a monster fighting to irradicate the jewish people. If you want to cry for some cry for all the poor people, starved, gassed, and experimented on by the axis.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
  • my great grandfather served in the Luftwaffe, and he never talked about the war. He has since passed, and my great grandmother just celebrated her 102nd birthday. I understand their scars, and why neither of them had ever talked about what they experienced beyond when they were evacuated from Berlin, and their siblings all being killed on the Russian front. All that remains from that time period are a handful of pictures of young men in uniform, and unmarked graves somewhere east. I cannot begin to imagine what they thought and felt. I'm just fortunate to have had them and loved them.

    @Slafgoalskiy@Slafgoalskiy10 ай бұрын
    • Well at least he's joined his siblings in hell, your grandmother sounds like she'll be down there too soon enough.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • @@JD1010101110you must be Jewish. How’s the battle with Hamas going? On the news it is showing more IDF coffins coming back than Hamas getting killed. In 10 years the world view will not held Germany today as accountable for WW2 atrocities as one they’re not like that anymore and two the Germans today aren’t the past. However, in 10 years people will still see the Zionist state an a genocidal state that wipes out a native land and is the cause of the illegals of immigrants pouring into Europe.

      @aizac91@aizac913 ай бұрын
    • @@JD1010101110wtf man

      @nathanreed4274@nathanreed42742 ай бұрын
    • Lol.

      @bobbyjuju7442@bobbyjuju74422 ай бұрын
    • Young murderers in uniform*

      @wojtekdomadej3808@wojtekdomadej38082 ай бұрын
  • Amazing channel, great audio, high quality video, accurate roll footage, and solid commentary. God bless! ❤

    @LavekGaming@LavekGaming7 ай бұрын
  • We have this substitute teacher at our high school, who was subbing for our American History class about a month ago. He told us an incredible story about our World War II unit. His father, an American officer, was stranded alone in the middle of a battlefield on the race to Berlin. He peaked around a tree, where a German SS officer saw him. The American officer thought he was going to die, but then suddenly the German officer signaled him to run away (with his gun) while he still could. No other German men saw him, just that one. I don't know much more than that, but it's so incredible. We would never of heard of that if it wasn't for my substitute teacher, a simple, old man. He wouldn't even be born if it wasn't for the heart of that German military officer.

    @jaykobleuthauser@jaykobleuthauser14 күн бұрын
  • When i was growing up it was the ww1 vets dying off. Now its the second. These guys went through hell on earth on a global scale and every one of their stories are absoulutely remarkable. Hopefully we can see some more interviews in the coming years. Were running out of this living history

    @onlineguy1984@onlineguy198411 ай бұрын
    • were u born in the 80´s?

      @Supernova1.980@Supernova1.9809 ай бұрын
    • @@Supernova1.980 yes

      @onlineguy1984@onlineguy19849 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate what you’re doing. Most WW2 vets are passing and their stories along with Korea and Vietnam should be told or they’ll be gone forever

    @craigdavenport2905@craigdavenport290510 ай бұрын
  • First of all, thank you SO much for doing this. I'm a fellow doc filmmaker, and this is always something I wish I could've done so it gives me so much joy to see that you're out there making it happen and capturing these memories for future generations. You just got an instant Patreon supporter! P.S. THANK YOU for exporting in cinemascope and not baking letterboxes into a 16x9 render, I can enjoy this on my widescreen monitor unlike even Marvel and Disney trailers that turn into a double-letterboxed nightmare.

    @DavidParrella@DavidParrella9 ай бұрын
    • Your enjoying a film about someone who should have been shot. Woke

      @nj821@nj8218 ай бұрын
  • Thanks! AMAZING WORK GOD BLESS THE TROOPS

    @joepipito7431@joepipito74313 ай бұрын
  • This is pure gold! Thank you. When they tell their stories, I feel like Im right with them in the trenches or cockpits or wherever they have served. I cant even imagine how painful it must be for Dr. Forster and other vets from WW2 seeing what is happening in the world today.

    @marknonnenmacher1918@marknonnenmacher191811 ай бұрын
  • Amazing, keeping these stories alive is a very honorable thing to do.

    @MattiasG-nl7qf@MattiasG-nl7qf11 ай бұрын
    • Is it honourable to profit from these stories? I would say it is indeed honourable if the money was spent to cover costs and the remainder donated to homeless veterans but I'm pretty sure that is not the case...

      @jrob5115@jrob511511 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jrob5115 c8heith half a million clicks you're not getting rich overnight. There's a load of people working on these videos who probably all need to get paid

      @janebtar2167@janebtar216711 ай бұрын
    • @@jrob5115everyone needs to make a living. This channel provides a service, therefore they are entitled to monetary compensation relative to success of their service rendered… that’s not unreasonable now, is it?

      @girth8613@girth861311 ай бұрын
    • The thing that is important to learn from war stories are the patterns so we will not repeat them. Seeing the patterns can save your life.

      @alisaaustin8431@alisaaustin843111 ай бұрын
  • Well, I don't ever watch videos like this but something popped up in my feed for it and decided to watch. Little did I know I would end up crying my eyes out.

    @Blessed_Souls@Blessed_SoulsАй бұрын
  • This is a great cause. Thank you for shedding light on what it means to be a real patriot. And to those patriots thank you for your service and sacrifices. They have not been forgotten

    @mattspencer2223@mattspencer222310 ай бұрын
    • This is probably the most American thing one could say. The whole irony is that patriotism was what started the war in the first place. Most Germans, me included, will frown on anyone who calls himself a patriot. Being proud of where you're from is not an achievement, putting your nation above others and their peoples is the root cause of so much suffering even to this very day.

      @sidremus@sidremus9 ай бұрын
    • Sorry, your thanking a nazi for his service?

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
  • With a teary eye, I say thank you! Wolfram's story needs to be seen by the entire youth of America so as we can avoid repeating this catastrophe at home. Bless you Wolfram Forster and your legacy.

    @BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists11 ай бұрын
    • Fighting for the white race will not be repeated anywhere in Western Civilization. The message spread by the Globalist Allies after WWII is "Whites cannot have a country of their own, anywhere on the planet". The antiwhites are firmly in control. You should be overjoyed.

      @brantdanger@brantdanger11 ай бұрын
    • Lol what? What are you even trying to compare there? Seems pretty insane to say this is being repeated in America. Just out of touch with reality.

      @DanelectroJazz@DanelectroJazz11 ай бұрын
    • @@DanelectroJazz If you are not openly looking, you may never find anything.

      @BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists11 ай бұрын
    • Watch Europa the Last Battle for the truth regarding WW1/WW2

      @cybergun01@cybergun019 ай бұрын
    • Why? are you an actual moron? He was a coward and bully. He fought for evil, if he hadn't sucked at his job there would be no Jewish people in america, black people would be slaves again and gay people would be hunted? Why would you bless that?

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
  • This needs to be a movie with Paul Dano. What an incredible story!

    @JTYF2@JTYF28 ай бұрын
  • I read "The Deadly Brotherhood" some years back and it was incredibly impactful on my thinking and my views on war. It was about the infantry soldier in WW2 Europe and the one point that will always stick out in my mind was that as an American GI was guarding a line of German POWs as they marched by, he looked into a German soldier's eyes and all he could see was just another scared shitless 18-year old kid just like him, in a place that neither of them wanted to be for reasons that neither of them understood but were there solely because someone told them to go.

    @alteregos3891@alteregos38918 ай бұрын
  • It’s so important to document individual experiences like this. When I was age 9-12 I was living in North Germany, Schleswig-Holstein in a village called Brodersby where my parents were renovating a house. Living in a cottage down the road from us was a WW2 Vet named Herbert, who I spoke with a couple times. He was deaf in one ear from a Russian soldier shooting a gun next to his head while he was a POW. I only wish I was older back then so I could have asked him more about his life!

    @dioclex7308@dioclex730811 ай бұрын
    • The first time I visited Germany was to Schleswig with college around 1998 visiting farms. I still remember the farmers wife making the best soup I have ever had.

      @williambeard5526@williambeard552611 ай бұрын
  • Such a beautiful story of the German perspective. And the great man unfortunately is totally right about the fact that History is repeating it self as we speak. Thanks you for these great videos

    @TravelingToHistory@TravelingToHistory11 ай бұрын
    • Sad but true

      @seanohare5488@seanohare548811 ай бұрын
    • “What we learn from History is that no one learns from History.” Otto Von Bismarck.

      @duartesimoes508@duartesimoes50811 ай бұрын
    • @@duartesimoes508 Otto Von Bismarck didnt say that you dunce. Hegel did.

      @grumbogee1772@grumbogee177211 ай бұрын
    • A great man? who fought to lengthen the holocaust? if that is your idea of greatest you are the risk of history repeating

      @JD1010101110@JD101010111011 ай бұрын
    • And not in the way the media brainwashes everyone into believing, but the complete polar opposite.

      @thatperformer3879@thatperformer387911 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this. I appreciate this project a lot. Shout out from Jamaica 🇯🇲 🙌

    @davidfoote3431@davidfoote34317 ай бұрын
  • One of my favorite people I ever met had been a young cadet on a submarine for the German Navy. I remember him telling me how he thought that the most blessed day of his life was when he was captured and taken as a POW, by the English army. He moved to America and raised his family and was one of the kindest, most gentle man I’ve ever met. He was so tall, and I remember when he shook my hand, my hand disappearing into his because his hands were so large. You were a wonderful human being Mr. Stenchley…. I’m glad you survived the war and we’re so blessed.

    @SGoldsmith111@SGoldsmith1116 ай бұрын
  • I would’ve loved you to interview my grandad - he served in the RAF as a pilot during WWII. However, sadly he passed away in 1990. I really appreciate all the work that you do with your channel and thank you for sharing Wolfram Forster’s memories here. The story about the dentist just speaking his mind stunned me, I can’t imagine living in a society like that. To have lived and breathed it is really something else.

    @JAMamation@JAMamation11 ай бұрын
  • Excellent. Puts a human face on the ordinary German soldier. He is to saluted for his honesty and for his service in the US military.

    @tomatkinson3813@tomatkinson381311 ай бұрын
    • So you are saluted a man who participated in prolonging how long death camps stayed open? who murdered allied service men trying to stop the Nazis. So you are saluting the murder of jewish men, women and children. So you are either a moron or a bigot.

      @JD1010101110@JD10101011109 ай бұрын
    • Serving USA is serving evil and destruction.

      @dreamawake2670@dreamawake26709 ай бұрын
  • The end broke my heart… to have lived through such a horrid time and to see history possibly so quickly repeating itself…

    @jonathonmullinix4624@jonathonmullinix4624Ай бұрын
  • This is such a great channel ! Thanks for doing what you do.

    @willsmithhitme7728@willsmithhitme77282 ай бұрын
  • These small docuseries are beautifully made. Well done finding these absolute gems of people to interview.

    @EAADetailing@EAADetailing9 ай бұрын
  • You cannot paint all Germans with a wide brush like some people do. This man was good through & through. Thank you for telling your story sir! I will be purchasing your book to show to my 11 year old daughter. That likes learning about history.

    @rickreid81@rickreid8111 ай бұрын
    • Most German soldiers were, it was the nazi minority that were the brutal heartless cold, calculative ones.

      @MrRedeyedJedi@MrRedeyedJedi11 ай бұрын
    • Right? A great many people so much as hear the word "Nazi", or put World War II and Germany together, and automatically vilify everyone not of the Allies. The atrocities are what they are, and some people genuinely were sick and twisted - but it was only certain people. The vast majority of the ranks were scared kids far away from home just following orders, absolutely no different than the Americans or the British. You have the inevitable extremists, but people would be surprised how not so different so many soldiers from either side were. Were it not for the circumstances, many of them would have been good friends. The real atrocity is war itself, and it should never have happened. Those who vilify all non-Allies forget the very lessons learned from war. Hatred and ignorance is the very reason these atrocities happened in the first place. Those who blanket all as evil simply for being on the wrong side are no different than the extremists who blanketed all Jews, etcetera, and killed MILLIONS of them. In the end, we are not so very different, in ways that would surprise, and appall us. We should learn to forgive, and to understand, to never let something like this happen again. Those who truly learn from war are friends with those they fought against. Those who leave with burning hatred learned nothing, and will only repeat the same mistakes.

      @Seeker-wq8jc@Seeker-wq8jc11 ай бұрын
    • People who do that are idiots and just wanna blame someone to justify their actions

      @Gaminglife-sf1oz@Gaminglife-sf1oz11 ай бұрын
    • The Germans were the good guys in WW2 despite whatever lies you've been taught in school. America should have helped them instead of Stalin and the communists. Now look at the clown world we are in. The only people who gained anything from WW2 were the ✡s.

      @ashwilliams3859@ashwilliams385911 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing this.

    @bleachersking@bleachersking2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for these awesome videos

    @chrisb1700@chrisb17009 сағат бұрын
  • Its amazing you finally got your German side story you have been wanting for so long! Congrats!

    @BoldLion@BoldLion11 ай бұрын
  • I don't think I'll ever forget his story about that dentist on trial. How difficult it must have been for him to be forced to fight for a system he didn't believe in.

    @Hevynly1@Hevynly111 ай бұрын
    • Amazing in that story was he was that dentist woman customer for 13 years despicable woman I wondered what happened to her

      @seanohare5488@seanohare548811 ай бұрын
    • It's called survival!! They were also fighting to defend their homeland {1944 - 45}, against the invading forces.

      @johnreape2833@johnreape283311 ай бұрын
    • @@seanohare5488 99,9% nothing happened to her. The 'denazification' of Germany was largely just words. Captains of industry kept their jobs, fanatical higher officers formed the core of the new Bundeswehr, thousands of participants in the holocaust put down their uniforms, went home and picked up their former lives. Little nazis like that woman, condemning a man to death to score some brownie points with the regime, never got their due punishments.

      @hardanheavy@hardanheavy11 ай бұрын
    • @@johnreape2833 desperation not survival. Hitler thought he can over power the world with his evil only to be taken by a swipe Surprise.

      @duncanchizizi6543@duncanchizizi654311 ай бұрын
    • It's somehow comparable with the situation in Russia now. And that's shocking.

      @Schmudini@Schmudini11 ай бұрын
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