Fate of Hitler's Home Guard
Fate of Hitler's Home Guard
With German military losses mounting, Adolf Hitler ordered all able-bodied men between the ages of 16 and 60 to defend their homeland, 1944.
Contunico © ZDF Studios GmbH, Mainz; Thumbnail Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-J31391 (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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Transcript
NARRATOR: Autumn 1944 - it is only a matter of time before Hitler’s regime is defeated. The armies of the Allied forces are at the borders of the German Reich. The Allies are advancing from all sides with superior force. The Wehrmacht suffers great losses. Hitler orders that all able-bodied men between the ages of 16 and 60 be called to defend their country. The Home Guard is under the command of SS-Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler. Propaganda continues to speak of victory. But it is the last reserves who are expected to march. This army of grandfathers and grandsons is supposed to stop the enemy from treading on German soil.
HORST BLANKE: "We were totally obliged and, no matter what, had to go into battle to the very last one of us, because duty was more than death."
NARRATOR: Many of them are not even 16 years old.
REINHARD APPEL: "If need be, we were trained to die for Führer, the People and the Fatherland."
NARRATOR: Everywhere Home Guard units now stand at the side of Wehrmacht soldiers. In Berlin alone there are some 90,000 recruits. Trained and armed under the most provisional conditions, the Allied invasion meets with barely any resistance. But the rallying cries of the National Socialists continue to have their effect.
JO BRETTSCHNEIDER: "The older soldiers of my Home Guard company, all of them older than me, could have been my father. To the very end, they clung on to their hope that things would turn for the better."
NARRATOR: April 1945 - the Red Army penetrates the center of Berlin. Even younger soldiers are armed with bazookas to attack enemy tanks.
LOTHAR LOEWE: "And then I positioned myself about 20-30 meters away, aimed just below the turret and hit the tank."
NARRATOR: Among the Hitler Youth cracking a tank is a test of one's honor.
LOEWE: "But then I got terribly scared and crouched down in fright, because I was expecting the tank to explode. And it did. I don’t think anybody came out of that one."
NARRATOR: Children become soldiers. And they die like soldiers.
APPEL: "We were nothing more than cannon fodder, cannon fodder who took over from experienced soldiers."
NARRATOR: Some invaders cannot believe their eyes.
MICHAIL POSELSKIJ: "These were not soldiers. These were kids, 14, 15 years old. Mama's boys still living at home. No, these were really not soldiers. They were wearing uniforms that drooped over their shoulders because they were too big. Nothing fit."
NARRATOR: In the end, they just wanted to survive.
DIETER HILDEBRANDT: "We were afraid that we were going die now at the end of the war. And that’s what happened to a lot of us."
NARRATOR: How many victims the Home Guard campaign took continues to be debated. There are estimates of well over 100,000 dead and missing. How many of these victims fell at the hands of Allied soldiers, we will never know.
HORST BLANKE: "We were totally obliged and, no matter what, had to go into battle to the very last one of us, because duty was more than death."
NARRATOR: Many of them are not even 16 years old.
REINHARD APPEL: "If need be, we were trained to die for Führer, the People and the Fatherland."
NARRATOR: Everywhere Home Guard units now stand at the side of Wehrmacht soldiers. In Berlin alone there are some 90,000 recruits. Trained and armed under the most provisional conditions, the Allied invasion meets with barely any resistance. But the rallying cries of the National Socialists continue to have their effect.
JO BRETTSCHNEIDER: "The older soldiers of my Home Guard company, all of them older than me, could have been my father. To the very end, they clung on to their hope that things would turn for the better."
NARRATOR: April 1945 - the Red Army penetrates the center of Berlin. Even younger soldiers are armed with bazookas to attack enemy tanks.
LOTHAR LOEWE: "And then I positioned myself about 20-30 meters away, aimed just below the turret and hit the tank."
NARRATOR: Among the Hitler Youth cracking a tank is a test of one's honor.
LOEWE: "But then I got terribly scared and crouched down in fright, because I was expecting the tank to explode. And it did. I don’t think anybody came out of that one."
NARRATOR: Children become soldiers. And they die like soldiers.
APPEL: "We were nothing more than cannon fodder, cannon fodder who took over from experienced soldiers."
NARRATOR: Some invaders cannot believe their eyes.
MICHAIL POSELSKIJ: "These were not soldiers. These were kids, 14, 15 years old. Mama's boys still living at home. No, these were really not soldiers. They were wearing uniforms that drooped over their shoulders because they were too big. Nothing fit."
NARRATOR: In the end, they just wanted to survive.
DIETER HILDEBRANDT: "We were afraid that we were going die now at the end of the war. And that’s what happened to a lot of us."
NARRATOR: How many victims the Home Guard campaign took continues to be debated. There are estimates of well over 100,000 dead and missing. How many of these victims fell at the hands of Allied soldiers, we will never know.
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