Line of Sight

(1) Camp Guard
“This one!” the live skeleton calls out with crackling voice to the well-fed American soldier whose full frame dwarfs almost all the other men standing atop the soft spring rain soaked mud within wood and barbed wire fences.


I should have killed you when I had the chance you fucking maggot!


“No, it’s a mistake, I am a prisoner!” I shout before the skeleton’s right fist smashes against the back of my skull, knocking me forward.


Bringing my arms up to cover my head, I hear the American “You’re too fat to be a prisoner.”
“He’s a guard, just like the other one!” another frame in soiled striped pajamas offers in a broken Hungarian tinged accent.


“I’m not a guard, I worked in the dispensary!” I claim from a crouched position, holding the back of my head with both hands as a warm liquid begins covering my palms.


“Guard, Guard, he was a Guard!” skeleton barks, as he picks up a shovel from the ground.


Fucking Dog, shut your mouth!


Imploringly, I look up at the American soldier. His rifle is slung over his right shoulder; sidearm latched at his hip. My eyes meet his for a moment.


“I going for a walk.” He says as he steps toward one of the flea infested wood frame barracks.


“No, don’t leave me here! Don’t leave me with them!” I scream, fully reaching a higher octave than I’ve been capable of since I was a small boy.


The Hungarian’s heal crashes into my sternum, sending me tumbling on my back.


How can such a remnant of a man have such power in his kick?


Mud envelops my blood stained hands as I try to lift my torso off the ground. I look for the American, but he’s now a meter away. Turning back to the first skeleton, I can see rage and hatred in his eyes.


It’s over now, you don’t need to hate me.


“It’s over, I can help you.” I offer in a soft, humble tone.


He clenches the shovel in his right hand. His bony knuckles extend so far inside the stretched skin that the white of his bones is clearly visible.


Quickly turning toward the Hungarian, I cry “Please, Help Me, please, . . . please.!”


His eyes regard me for a moment, then pass toward the skeleton, who is lifting the shovel with his right arm.


Damn them!


I turn back to the skeleton, my eyes catching his.


You are not worthy to kill me!


His arm holding the shovel dangles its blade over my head for a split second.


You can’t kill me!


He brings down the shovel with the full force his meager body can deliver.


(2) Liberated Prisoner
“This one!” I call out with crackling voice to the well-fed American soldier whose full frame dwarfs my emaciated body barely staying upright atop the soft spring rain soaked mud of the camp where I’ve managed to survive the past two years.


This bastard is trying to pass himself off as a prisoner. Doesn’t he realize he stands out like a wolf among sheep? I’ll show him sheep!


“No, it’s a mistake, I am a prisoner!” Haisler shouts before I smash my stretched skin covered right fist against the back of his skull, knocking him forward.


He raises his arms, attempting to protect his head as the American says “You’re too fat to be a prisoner.”


Yes, it’s so blatant!


“He’s a guard, just like the other one!” Leon screeches in a broken Hungarian tinged accent.

“I’m not a guard, I worked in the dispensary!”  Haisler pleads from a crouched position, holding the back of his head with both hands as blood begins covering his palms.


“Guard, Guard, he was a Guard!” I bark as I bend to retrieve a shovel from off the ground.
I’ll show you what sheep can do!


Imploringly, Haisler looks up at the American soldier. Their eyes meet for a moment before the American announces “I going for a walk.”

The soldier steps toward one of the flea infested wood frame barracks, back turned away from me, Haisler and Leon.


“No, don’t leave me here! Don’t leave me with them!” Haisler screams in such a high pitched schrill it hurts my ears.


Leon’s heal crashes into Haisler’s sternum, sending him tumbling on his back.


You’re not so strong now, are you “Guard!”


From in the mud, Haisler attempts to life his torso off the ground. At first he is turned toward the American.


No one can help you now.


The soldier is over a meter away, not looking at our little party. Then Haisler turns back toward me with fear in his eyes.


YOU will get what YOU deserve!


“It’s over, I can help you.” Haisler mumbles in a pleading tone.


YES, IT’S OVER NOW, YOU MONSTER!


I clench the shovel in my right hand so tight my knuckles extend so far inside my stretched skin that the white of my bones is clearly visible.


Haisler implores Leon “Please, Help Me, please, . . . please.!”


Leon looks at Haisler, then at me.  Our eyes meet as I use all of my strength to lift the shovel above my head.


I am Karma!


Haisler’s eyes lock with mine as I stand over him, shovel raised high.


You deserve so much worse than this!


With every ounce of energy I possess, I bring the shovel crashing down upon his head.


You deserve so much more than this!


(3) American Soldier
“This one!” the live skeleton calls out with crackling voice as I walk with him across a patch of grass topped mud between two dilapidated block houses in a filthy camp  that smells of human flesh.


This place makes me sick!


“No, it’s a mistake, I am a prisoner!” the clearly well-fed man shouts before the skeleton strikes him in the back of the head.


How many of these guards are going to try to pass themselves off as prisoners?


“You’re too fat to be a prisoner.”  I announce in an exasperated tone.


I just want to get out of here!


“He’s a guard, just like the other one!” another frame in soiled striped pajamas offers in a broken Hungarian tinged accent.


“I’m not a guard, I worked in the dispensary!” the well-fed man pleads from a crouched position, holding the back of his head with both hands as blood begins to cover his palms.


“Guard, Guard, he was a Guard!” skeleton barks, as he picks up a shovel from the ground.
I can’t stand this. 


Desperately looking up at me, the well-fed man in striped pajamas catches my eyes. 
I don’t want any part of this.


“I going for a walk.” I call out, turning my back on the whole group. I take a few steps away toward one of the flea infested wood frame barracks.


“No, don’t leave me here! Don’t leave me with them!” the well-fed man screams in a high shrill.


Swing Low, Sweet Chariot, Coming Fore To Carry Me Home.


Although I try to block out the sound, I hear the well-fed man crash to the ground.


Coming Fore To Carry Me Home. Swing Low.


The well-fed man mumbles something I don’t catch, nor have the will to translate from German.


Swing Low, Sweet Chariot, Coming Fore To Carry Me Home.


“Please, Help Me, please, . . . please.!” The well-fed man calls out.


How could they do this?


Swing Low, Sweet Chariot, Coming Fore To Carry Me Home.


A loud thud echos from behind me, the sound of metal hitting bone.


How could they do this?


"Sweet Chariot, Come Fore To Carry Me Home. . . Please!" I say under my breath.

 

 

 

Upon entering Dachau concentration camp, American soldiers were shocked and mortified by what they found. Piles of skeletons, burnt corpses, and inhuman looking men wasted away to nothing barely able to talk or stand.  They also found some men who looked very well fed, in similar striped pajamas to the starved men around them.  The prisoners pointed these men out as guards who could not escape.  They had been attempting to deceive the Americans into believing that they were also prisoners.  Some of these guards had been so cruel to the prisoners in the past that there are cases of soldiers turning a blind eye from quick retribution.  

The Holocaust has nothing to do with war. It is simply a horrible example of how awful humans can treat other humans.

 

Concrete Macaroon

A constant pressure to push with nothing left to expunge has haunted me for three days.  

So little energy left, so little fluids left, so much hunger.  

I’m not alone with dysentery; half the chaps have it. How can we not with open latrines, vast swarms of flies getting into everything, dead or dying lying about in the wisp of open land between our trench and the Turks.

Counting them would pass the time at least. Millions of little slate colored bodies with wings zipping about from dead man to latrine to mouth within minutes. 

How can I contemplate yet another meal? 

How can I deprive my belly of something to push out?

I stare at the tin of Jam and my dark green ration bag, both under a blanket of flies so think that only knowing they are there allows me to see them at all.

The last time I tried to have dinner I couldn’t do it.  I tried to eat, but could not bring myself to do it for the flies.  When I opened the tin a swarm immediately covered the jam.  I could not see it through their undulating bodies.  Putting my overcoat over myself, I tried to pick out the flies.  I could not keep them all out, but some stayed outside of the coat.  Spreading the jam on the biscuit with my left hand, I held my right over it, hoping to keep a few off of the surface.  Upon opening my mouth in the hope of putting the jammed concrete macroon inside, my throat was swarming with flies pushing against my palate, gums and cheeks from within.  I just couldn’t bear it, and threw the tin with the biscuit over the parapet while spitting out violently what liquids I still had within me.  

I can not do that again!

“Pass me the net” I call out to Ackman, figuring that if I set the kit up right, I can jam the hardtack from within the fly net, keeping most of the damned buggers at bay.

Placing the fly net over my head, I pull the netting down so that it’s resting upon my chest, shoulders and back.  
My hands grasp the tin and ration bag.

Which should I open first?

I set the tin down within the swarm again as I focus on the ration bag.

If I can get out a biscuit,  put it on my shoulder, and then work on the Jam, I may be able to do this all inside the net.

Lifting one biscuit out of the bag with my left hand, I bring it up to my right shoulder. I slip the biscuit under the net, brushing off the flies as it enters my little sanctum.

It worked, I have the teeth breaking dry biscuit on my shoulder!

Within a mass of frenzied flies lays the rest of my dinner.  Searching for the jam, my hand brushes across countless aerial and grounded beings before touching the tin.

How about if I open the tin under the net? Then the flies can’t swarm in.

I lift the tin so that it’s flush with my sternum, slipping it’s metallic form under the net while I’m careful not to let in too many flies.

Damn, there are some in here now! 

I could try to get them out. Or, I could eat.

I don’t have the energy to get them out.

Placing the tin under my chin with my left hand, my right pulls on the tab from outside the net.  As the metal lid peals away the couple of flies within the net dart for the jam.

At least there are only a few in the jam now.

I hold the tin with my right hand from outside the net, slipping my left to pick up the biscuit before dipping it in the jam. 

So close!

My hand comes up toward my mouth.  Instead of opening fully, I keep it closed, letting the jam and fly spotted biscuit pry its way in.  Two flies push against my lips, hoping to follow the jam they love into my mouth.

No, you can’t come in!

I bite down on the biscuit, hearing a crack I hope was the hardened bread rather than my decaying teeth.

It worked! No flies for dinner!

Shutting my eyes for one moment I simply listen to the buzzing, knowing full well none of it is coming from within my own head.

I open my eyes to stare out of the net toward the fly covered wall of my bivvy.


You’re free to be where I cannot see. Flying about from Turkish Trench to where the maggots eat of putrid stench.  You touch every last drop of waste, and then sit upon my biscuit for taste.  I dare not think of where you’ve been, for I’m about to empty my Jam tin. Please make me sick so I can leave this place. Otherwise, I feel I may not see the end of this race.

 

 

 

 

Soldiers from Australia and New Zealand (The Anzacs) were among the least provisioned in the 8 months of the Gallipoli campaign of 1915.  Provided with hard tack biscuits, canned bully beef, and watery jam, many came down with dysentery and typhoid.  Vast swarms of flies fed off of rotting bloated corpses lying between the trenches, the hastily dug and often overflowing latrines, and the lice who were the permanent occupants of all of the clothes worn by the fighting men on both sides.  Over 25,000 men lived within a less than six square kilometer area hugging the sea with no fresh water or places to properly bath. Oh, and the Turkish snipers would shoot you if you came out into the open, or the random shot from enemy artillery could hit you. Not to mention the risk of patrols or actual battle. One soldier, Ion L. Idriess, is quoted as saying “Of all the bastards of places this is the greatest bastard in the world.”

Tribute

His mouth in an open roar, the grime covered lion of the north stares toward the distracted police officer who stands straight as a nail atop the stairway leading away from the Colonnade du Congress. 

The lions are too dirty.

The officer gazes at some unknown person or object down Rue Royale.

Keep looking that way you collaborator.

Guarded by the unkempt and unyielding lion, I walk around his platform, slipping the small collection of spring flowers from behind my back so they are always on the other side of my body from the distracted police officer.

How could the Germans keep us from honoring my brothers from The War?

I approach the front of the Tomb at the base of the column, laying the flowers down directly atop the plaque for the fallen which lies in between the statues for Freedom of Association and Freedom of Education.

We can no longer gather together, nor teach the proud history of Belgian soldiers.

Pausing for a moment, I offer the unknown soldier, and all he represents, my prayers on this anniversary of the end of The War. My chest heaves, pushing me forward so I’m bent over the plaque, as tears well in my eyes.

Your sacrifice will be redeemed. We will be free again.

Raising my eyes toward the eternal flame, I’m shocked to see it’s orange hue flickering in the morning breeze.

They have not extinguished you.

They cannot extinguish you.

Backing away with respect, I wait until my feet are past the base of the lions before turning away from the tomb.  Immediately my eyes return to the police officer at the top of the stairs. He is now facing directly across the street toward the Tourism Office.

Honor, my friend, Honor.

Running my hands down my uniform, I straighten my lapel and trousers before returning to my post. 

We may be banned from honoring our War dead, but as long as I’m in charge of this tomb they will be honored.

 

 

Directly after Belgium surrendered to Germany on May 28, 1940 the NAZI occupation forces instituted several restrictions on the Belgian people, including an edict banning tribute to the dead from World War I.  Germany was humiliated by Belgium in World War I, and had no taste for those responsible for that humiliation to receive any honor. Despite this edict, Belgians continued to pay their respects to their fallen from the previous war.  These early acts of non-violent resistance led to the creation of a resistance movement across the country, forces that eventually cooperated with, and played a meaningful part in, the liberation of their homeland in 1944 and 1945. After the war two additional plaques were added to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier honoring the dead from World War II, as well as those who have fallen since. On  November 11 each year the King of Belgium visits the tomb, honoring all of the people who perished for the country.