The Enemy I Knew: German Jews in the Allied Military in World War II

The Enemy I Knew: German Jews in the Allied Military in World War II

by Steven Karras
The Enemy I Knew: German Jews in the Allied Military in World War II

The Enemy I Knew: German Jews in the Allied Military in World War II

by Steven Karras

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Overview

Jewish refugees who fled the Nazis—then returned to fight them as Allied soldiers—share their experiences: “Heroic, poignant [and] compelling.” —The Daily News

Even Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel struggled with the question: Why didn’t the Jews fight back? But he finally concluded that the real question was how so many of them did. As he put it, “Tormented, beaten, starved, where did they find the strength—spiritual and physical—to resist?”

In fact, over 10,000 German Jews fought in the Allied armies of World War II. This book honors those European-born combat veterans—refugees from the Nazi regime in Germany and Austria who faced their persecutors by joining the Allied forces in a fight against the country of their birth. These twenty-seven interviews take us into the unique and harrowing experiences of brave men—and one brave woman—whose service restored a sense of dignity and allowed them to rise above their former victimization.

All burned with anger at the Germans who’d subjected them, often as young children, to cruelty in everyday life in their hometowns, and to ridicule in the national media. As soldiers who knew the language and psychology of the enemy better than any of their comrades, they struck back with newfound pride against the rampant injustice that had annihilated their families, destroyed their prospects, and subjected many of them to the worst forms of physical abuse, both random and terrifying. In The Enemy I Knew they tell their stories—and the world is richer for their heroic acts, and for their testimony.

“It is rare to come across a book about a forgotten story from World War II, but Steve Karras has found one of the most compelling, little-known accounts from the war and he tells it brilliantly. Harrowing, breathtaking in parts, and completely absorbing.” —Andrew Carroll, New York Times–bestselling editor of War Letters

“Few stories can rival the ones told in The Enemy I Knew.” —Library Journal (starred review)

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781616732493
Publisher: Quarto Publishing Group USA
Publication date: 12/20/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 321
Sales rank: 490,228
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Steven Karras is the co-director of the feature-length documentary About Face: The Story of the Jewish Refugee Soldiers of World War II. He has taped nearly a thousand hours of video and audio oral histories and has amassed a considerable archive of unpublished personal memoirs, photographs, newspaper articles, family memorabilia, and individual war records. Steve, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, is a screenwriter and lives with his wife in Los Angeles.

Steven Karras is the co-director of the feature-length documentary About Face: The Story of the Jewish Refugee Soldiers of World War II. He has taped nearly a thousand hours of video and audio oral histories and has amassed a considerable archive of unpublished personal memoirs, photographs, newspaper articles, family memorabilia, and individual war records. Steve, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin--Madison, is a screenwriter and lives with his wife in Los Angeles. This is his first book.Michael Berenbaum is a Professor of Jewish Studies and Director of the Sigi Ziering Institute: Exploring the Ethical and Religious Implications of the Holocaust at the American Jewish University. He was also the Executive Producer of About Face.  www.aboutfacefilm.com

Table of Contents

Contents

Prologue

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1         Siegmund Spiegel

Chapter 2         Jerry Bechhofer

Chapter 3         Adelyn Bonin

Chapter 4         Eric Hamberg

Chapter 5         Bernard Fridberg

Chapter 6         Fritz Weinschenk

Chapter 7         Peter Terry

Chapter 8         William Katzenstein

Chapter 9         Karl Goldsmith

Chapter 10       Henry Kissinger

Chapter 11       John Stern

Chapter 12       Ralph Baer

Chapter 13       Bernard Baum

Chapter 14       Harold Baum

Chapter 15       Edmund Schloss

Chapter 16       Walter Reed

Chapter 17       Manfred Steinfeld

Chapter 18       Jack Hochwold

Chapter 19       Norbert Grunwald

Chapter 20       Eric Boehm

Chapter 21       Fred Fields

Chapter 22       Peter Masters

Chapter 23       John Brunswick

Chapter 24       Otto Stern

Chapter 25       Kurt Klein

Chapter 26       Harry Lorch

Chapter 27       Manfred Gans

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Publishers Weekly
“Few stories can rival the ones told in The Enemy I Knew.” Library Journal (Starred Review)
"This is a collection of 27 first-person combat accounts, sought out by the author, from German and Austrian Jews who served in the Allied Armed Forces in North Africa and Europe. These men (and one woman) had emigrated as children or young adults to the United States or Great Britain between 1937 and 1941. All of them jumped at the chance to fight the Nazis, and all served in combat (the woman was an ambulance driver). One man served in both the European and the Pacific theaters and returned to Germany in 1946 for occupation duty. These accounts, all newly published, are filled with terror and a simple courage, with a feeling of a duty fulfilled. Recommended." 

Military Heritage
"Imagine fleeing Nazi Germany because of one’s Jewish faith and then returning during the war as a member of the Allied forces. Author Steven Karras began interviewing Jewish refugees in 1999 who had fled Nazi persecution because of their religion and come to the United States and Great Britain, only to find themselves being inducted into the military and returning to their homeland. Following the oral-history format, Karras selected 27 individuals to interview for his book. One became a U.S. commando and actually liberated his own parents from a Nazi concentration camp. Another soldier was assigned to military intelligence and later questioned a former classmate who was serving in the German Army. Each vignette describes the individual’s early life in German or Austria and his subsequent military service."

The Jewish Tribune

"Steven Karras has avoided what could have been a dry academic analysis of the motives of German Jews for fighting in Allied armies against the Nazis. Rather, he has produced a collection of twenty-seven personal interviews in which people recall their emotions more than fifty years after World War II…The tales of battle are mind-boggling, as young men risked life and limb for an ideal….the narratives are fascinating."

The Daily News

"Heroic, poignant and heartbreaking, it is a compelling book. Some of the memoirs, especially those concerning escape from Germany, provide graphic pictures of the desperation that the Jewish community felt in the late 1930s, especially after Crystal Night, when the Nazis were closing and there were very few places to flee."

America in WWII

"...the unique background of these 27 veterans give The Enemy I Knew value for students of Jewish experiences before and during the war, as well as devotees of war stories."

Accent on Tampa Bay Magazine
“This book is a tribute to the overlooked men and women who risked everything to help rid the world of evil.”

Intermountain Jewish News
“In prose, the first-person accounts are riveting and illuminating, shining a light on a little-known dimension of the vast and complex story of World War II. The veterans who bear witness to their wartime experience are sometimes direct and blunt in their descriptions, often eloquent and philosophical and always fascinating…If you’re looking for powerful expressions of heartfelt patriotism—the kind that only personal experience can create—look no further than The Enemy I Knew. There is drama aplenty…After reading The Enemy I Knew, one is forced to conclude that the legendary Greatest Generation was even greater than we realized.”
 

The Jewish Review (Portland, OR)
“For all those who have not heard this story at their father’s or grandfather’s knee, and for anyone who has considered the question, ‘Why didn’t the Jews fight back?’ this book is essential.”
 

North County Times
“A sort of real-life version of the film ‘Inglourious Basterds’ without the baseball bats, the oral history The Enemy I Knew lets more than two dozen Jewish refugees from Germany and Austria who served in the U.S. and British militaries in Europe during World War II tell their stories. The larger themes may be familiar, but the story of Jews who fought back against their oppressors — who returned home in the conquering army — is uplifting in the face of the horror of the Holocaust...The stereotype of the weak Jew, going meekly to his fate in the death camps, is put to rest here. Those Jews who had the ability to fight back surely did — often in the uniform of the United States or Great Britain. (3 out of 4 stars).”
 

HistoryMike Blog
"The Enemy I Knew is an important contribution to the literature of the Holocaust and the Second World War, and I recommend the book to scholars and general readers alike. The book contains quite a few fascinating images not previously published, and readers will gain a much greater sense of this form of Jewish resistance to Nazi efforts to exterminate Jews and their culture."

 

Bookviews
“A little known story of WWII was the role of German Jews and it is told in The Enemy I Knew by Steven Karras. Though the Nazis rounded up and killed six million Jews, some German and Austrian Jews who had fled the Nazis were inducted into the Allied forces. The stories of 27 of them, including gripping recollections from Henry Kissinger, former US Secretary of State, are documented. They displayed incredible courage.”

 

The Jewish Magazine

"This is not a dry academic analysis of the motives of German Jews to fight in Allied armies against the Nazis. Rather, this is a collection of twenty-seven personal interviews in which people recollected their emotions more than fifty years after World War II. Some of those relating events are known, such as Henry Kissenger. Most, however, are faceless Jews who stepped forward to serve their newly found country in time of need."

 

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