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Description
Mr. Carter-Edwards recalls witnessing the sights of buildings with smoke stacks, hearing the word “Buchenwald” and realizing their destination.
Transcription
The train carried on, so on the fifth day the train stopped. The doors opened and wow, what a greeting. We were greeted by dozens and dozens of screaming military uniform people with dogs and whips and rifles and they were actually coming up on the boxcar grabbing people and throwing them on the siding, yelling and screaming and dogs are biting and so we thought, this can’t be a prisoner of war camp because we could see what looked like a camp in the distance so the Germans were yelling and pointing and so it was to our advantage to move in that direction because if not you were getting bit by the dogs or hit by the whip or the rifle and as we went in that direction, that the German SS were pointing at, we could see what looked like a camp, we could see barbwire, we could see guard towers and low lying buildings but we didn’t see the thing that scared us the most, as we got closer to the camp and out of the wooded area, we saw this building with a tall chimney, smoke belching out of it. And as we entered this camp, then we heard the word, Buchenwald. Buchenwald, the most notorious concentration camp in Germany.
Catégories
Entering Buchenwald Prison Camp
Médium
Video
Propriétaire
Veterans Affairs Canada
Guerre ou mission
Second World War
Emplacement géographique
England
Campagne
Bomber Command
Personne interviewée
Ed Carter-Edwards
Branche
Air Force
Unité ou navire
4<sup>th</sup> Medium Artillery Regiment
Occupation
Wireless Air Gunner
Date d’enregistrement
Durée
1:10