BECAUSE IT WAS A TRAGEDY THAT CAME AT THE END OF WORLD WAR TWO,
the infamous Black March conducted by the German regime against
Prisoners of War has been largely ignored by history. Nonetheless,
during 87 torturous days in the blizzard-like, frozen days of
winter 1945, beginning from Stalag IV in western Poland, 8,000
American and British airmen were forced to march as much as 40
miles a day across nothern Germany. They were not supplied with
proper clothing, sanitation, water or food. Night after weary night
they slept on the frozen ground in open fields or crowded into
ramshakle barns.
Those who died along the way were left behind on the side of the
road - never with the dignity of a burial.
Sergeant James B. Lindsay, of Kokomo, Indiana, was one of the
survivors. Under the very noses of the German guards he maintained
a daily diary of his experience.
More than that, his miraculous fall from the sky when his 9
other crewmates perished in a mid-air collision is breathtakingly
exciting. Then, to have survived that tragedy only to be betrayed
by Italian farmers and sold into the hands of the Germans was the
start of his thousand-mile journey to incarceration in Poland.
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