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I quickly insert two more stories, which happened with relatives.

My grandfather was medically unfit for soldierdom when WWII broke out. Of course, that means those who stay behind get all the nice girls, and so he met and married my grandmother. But, as the war on the Eastern Front proved no Blitzkrieg, the draft was extended to almost every man of working age, and my grandfather pulled in too.

But, he never fired a shot.

He spent almost all of his years in the military being shuffled from barracks to barracks, only to have his unit scattered the first time it was ordered into battle. (He threw away his uniform and made it home, where tragic news awaited him, but that's another story.) His letter exchanges with his wife detailed his time - his time under constant Allied bombing.

How experienced they became with bombing is shown by the following story.

A joint passenger - Hungarian military - German military train was pulling out of Losonc (today Lučenec/Slovakia) when some fighter jets arrived, and began to strafe the train with machine gun fire. When it passed for the second time, the sergeant of my grandfathers' wagon ordered the doors to be pulled wide open, half of the men hiding, the other half outside: to lie in the grass pretending to be dead.

Their car was the only one with zero casualties.

The bombed-out-barracks veterans knew fighter jet pilots don't waste ammo.

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Mon Oct 3rd, 2005 at 03:24:49 PM EST
A relative of mine had an evil stepmother, right out of a folk tale.

In the days during and after the Soviets crushed the 1956  Revolution, tens of thousands fled the country by train.

The evil stepmother gave some money to her two young stepsons, and told them to board a train too.

One of the brothers had another idea at the station, and went to my grandparents. The other boarded an express to Yugoslavia. He sat down in a compartment besides an old railway worker.

At the border, the border soldiers came to control everyone. There was the problem: they made clear no child was allowed to travel alone, my relative didn't just have no home but would have been arrested. In desperation, he told the controllers the old railway man was his father.

The old man played along without wincing.

He didn't say anything until the train arrived, then gave some money or food or papers to him (I don't remember this part of the story).

My relative, who ended up with foster parents in Western Europe, never learnt who his savior was.

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Mon Oct 3rd, 2005 at 03:35:10 PM EST
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