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Behind
German Lines: The WWII Prison Escapes of SGT George Kopanda
©2003, Rob Kopanda
In
memory of S/Sgt George C. Kopanda, 1st and 3rd Ranger Battalions
Who served in 5 campaigns, including successful campaigns in North Africa
and Sicily; was captured in Cisterna, Italy; escaped German POW camps on
three occasions; was finally liberated after 18 months by the British 2nd Army.
The
following is a summarized version of the memoirs of my father, who fought
valiantly in various campaigns in Tunisia,
Northern Africa, and Italy
prior to his capture.
At
dawn on
January 30, 1944, the 1st, 3rd, and 4th Ranger Battalions were advancing up a canal from
the perimeter of the Anzio
beachhead towards
Cisterna,
Italy, with the intention of attacking the town. Instead of encountering the
expected scattered resistance, they met with an overpowering force of
German soldiers, well-equipped with grenades, machine guns,
artillery and mortars. Germans surrounded wounded soldiers and threatened
to kill them if our soldiers continued firing their weapons. Many of the
Rangers were killed in battle or wanted to die fighting, and eventually
all of them were taken (history has it that all but 6 Rangers were either
captured or killed).
George
Kopanda at camp in Italy
(photo
courtesy Ranger Kopanda's sons)
The
following day they were taken by truck to
Rome, where they were mocked and spit on by Italian citizens. This may have
been just a display staged for the occupation forces; my father noticed
one woman crying and an Italian police officer making a "V" sign
while scratching his head. From
Rome
they were taken to a nearby camp, then to Latrina, followed by a grueling
three day trip to Mossberg, Germany,
and finally shipped by train to Stalag 2B in Hammerstein, Germany. Food rations given to the prisoners were meager, and their tight
quarters were accompanied by overflowing buckets of excrements.
Although
most of the prisoners were noncoms, they were made to work since they had
no identification to prove their status. My father and a fellow companion,
Louis Wojcik, volunteered to
work on a farm as they heard it was much easier to escape from than the
prison compound. It was actually a peat bog, where the peat was processed
and dried to be used as fuel. While filling a hopper (similar to a
concrete mixer) with the black muck, they occasionally would
"accidentally" include a brick or a stone, which would make the
engine spit, sputter and stop. In my father's words, "God knows how
many times (the guard) wanted to shoot us, right there and then!"
His
first escape took place with Lou appropriately on
July 4, 1944. With the assistance of a wrench and wire cutters, they made their way
out of a barred window (one of the bars was held with nuts and bolts) and
under a barbed-wire fence on a night when there was no guard on duty for a
long period of time. The men
traveled by night and slept in wooded areas at dawn. After seven
adventurous days, my father began to exhibit symptoms of malaria, well
known to the Rangers from a mosquito-infested swamp in Corleone,
Sicily. Too weak to walk, he suggested that Lou continue on his journey;
however, Lou selflessly opted to make contact with someone and turn
himself in as well. Some Polish farm workers brought the men via a
horse-drawn wagon to a German woman who owned the farm. She was distraught
with the leadership of the war, and broke down while mentioning that she
lost her husband and three sons on the Russian front. The men were
well-fed and treated kindly, and then turned into the local constable. On
the ride back to the POW camp, Lou also contacted malaria. After they
recovered, both men had to serve 10 days in solitary confinement, standard
for a first escape attempt.
My
father's second escape attempt was planned with two other Rangers, Joe
Phillips and Frank Cancelieri. They prepared themselves by studying
various maps of the area, most of which were smuggled into camp. The gear
which they carried, provided by their camp sergeant Robert Ehalt, included
a makeshift escape backpack, a 1/4" compass made to fit up a nostril,
a watch, and an onion-paper
map of the Danzig (Poland) area, which provided information such as the location of
elevated trains and the docking area of Swedish ships. The men made trades
with other POWs in order that all three of them would be scheduled for a
work camp, which in this case was a farm with a dairy. Here they found
that a civilian guard (Volkstrom) awakened prisoners who served as milkers
at
3 a.m.
He was known to unlock the outside gate, and then unlock a barred basement
gate and leave the keys in the lock. The milkers said there were no other
guards posted outside of the gate at this hour. He was never seen carrying
a flashlight, attributed to a shortage of batteries and the need for them
on the front; he also did not smoke, and would therefore have no need for
matches.
The
plan, then, was to loosen a light bulb in the quarters that the civilian guard would first enter, where the 3
men would be waiting crouched between beds in full gear. The light bulb
would remain intact in the milker's quarters so as to not arouse
suspicion; however, the milkers would take longer than usual to awaken,
providing their escaping comrades with additional time to make their move.
Sweat rolled down their faces when the time came and the guard flicked the
light switch to no avail; fortunately, though, all went as planned, and
they were soon on their way to freedom!
Beset
with the knowledge that they would soon be hunted, the men traversed over
80 kilometers before finding a suitable area to rest. One man would stand
guard while the other two slept for an hour. Their water supply was
usually drawn from a pond, pool or rainwater, or boggy area, and their
food supply was generally enriched by digging into the ground of farms for
items such as raw potatoes, rutabagas, and cabbage. My father noted how
the sound of wind blowing through various trees could remarkably inspire
the senses, and often would compose a poem or song.
A
variety of close encounters accompanied the fugitive Rangers. At one point
they were shot at while traveling at night. On another occasion they
encountered a Russian prisoner of war who worked alongside Polish farm
laborers, and to whom they could communicate through a combination of
broken Polish, German, and pantomime. He brought water and sandwiches for
the men, and introduced them to another Russian POW trustee and a Polish
farm worker. A plan was devised to acquire a couple of revolvers and for
the men to make a break for the Russian front. Unfortunately, the 2nd
trustee was thought to be caught with the guns in Danzig, and did not return.
A
favored mode of travel for the men was to hop a train. On the first
occasion, one of the men tripped and fell on a rail switch as they
attempted to board a moving freight train. Following this incident, they
were able to board a passenger train and, before anyone else entered the
car, they locked themselves in the bathroom under the justified assumption
that other passengers would think it was in use or out of order. This ride
took them about 50 kilometers to a railroad yard, abandoned after dark due
to bombing raids. They then found passage on the gondola of a freight
train, loaded with logs to twice its height. When this train came to a
stop, they climbed down to get a sense of what was going on, and Joe found
himself in a scuffle with what appeared to be a soldier. Joe knocked the
guard down, and the men ran past what appeared to be a control tower;
still being pursued, they made their way into the countryside and
eventually back to a set of railroad tracks.
Their
escapades came to an abrupt end when they found themselves walking past a
dimly-lit police station with an armed soldier standing guard. He was,
like the Ranger escapees, caught off guard and took a shot at Joe's hip.
Fortunately, the gun misfired; however, they were taken inside and
stripped, searched, interrogated and "booked." This time they
were sent to the discipline barracks of Stalag 20B in Williamsburg
rather than their base camp due to their escape activities. The British
prisoners of war at this camp were well-seasoned escape veterans and knew
all the angles. These British soldiers spoke of where a hundred men
escaped and how they were apprehended. They developed the art of raising
flowers to make ink for passports, currency, ration cards, and just about
every conceivable type of document. Tailors developed skills so good that
they could duplicate Hitler's own uniform. They selflessly pooled their
resources, and had access to equipment and supplies through trustees who
worked in town. My father suggested that they should have been commended
highly because of the number of soldiers and Gestapo that had to be taken
away from their duties to keep an eye on them.
My
father and his traveling buddies were actually happy to see the German
guards that arrived to take them back to base camp, if for no other reason
than to be free of the miniscule mites that dropped from the ceilings
every night, leaving them with swollen hands and faces, as well as
unforgettable misery. Frank and my father were required to serve 21 days
in solitary confinement for escaping twice, and another 21 days for
changing their names and numbers.
The
concrete building which served as their residence during confinement
consisted of 25 cells, each eight feet by ten feet with one barred window
that was a foot square and a wooden bunker without a mattress. A double
barbed-wire fence surrounded the compound. The inmates consisted of five
American GIs as well as soldiers from Belgium , France,
Serbia, and Poland. According to Geneva convention, prisoners confined to these cells were
required to have 1/2 hour of exercise in the morning and in the afternoon.
To meet this requirement, the German guards would have the men walk in a
circle on the side of the compound.
Occasionally
during the course of their walks, men in the adjacent regular compound
would toss chocolate bars or packages of cigarettes (staples during WWII)
to the confined prisoners. Eventually the guards caught on and reported
the incidents to the Sergeant of the Guard. He would then search all men
before they re-entered solitary confinement. At one point my father threw
two packs of cigarettes and a chocolate bar on his desk, raised
his arms to show he was not hiding any contraband, and told the Sergeant
of the Guard to take them since he would find them anyway. Although this
guard had a reputation as a zealous, mean and ruthless soldier, for some
reason he softened and explained philosophically how he was simply taking
orders from his superiors. My father saw this as an ideal time to make him
a proposition: he would get the officer a carton of cigarettes a day in
exchange for some food for the men in solitary. These would come from
extra supplies accumulated by the American camp sergeant, including weekly
parcels unavailable to those who were in confinement, and they were
considered superior to the ersatz German cigarettes. The Sergeant of the
Guard agreed to this lucrative deal as long as his superiors were unaware
of the activities, and if another carton was included for the night guards
who necessarily would be involved with the plan.
At
10:00 each evening, Joe would come with a gallon pot of stew-like soup and
an armload of goodies, along with the cigarettes for the guards; with the
assistance of a guard, my father would then distribute a bowl of the soup
and a pack of cigarettes (a chocolate bar or gum for those that did not
smoke) to each man in confinement, regardless of nationality. This routine
continued until their release. Since my father and Frank became known to
the guards as a result of this activity, a guard would occasionally knock
on their cell doors and offer to trade items, such as white bread
(difficult to procure at that time) or fresh fruits, for a pack of
American cigarettes. In his words, "Here we were, in solitary
confinement, and practically eating better than the bulk of the
Germans!"
The
final escape came towards the end of the war, when the POWs were being
evacuated from Stalag 10B in Sandbostel. Believing that the Germans were
going to walk them towards
Denmark, my father, along with Staff Sgt. Richard Thompson, Staff Sgt. Howard
Hedenstad & Private John Rosendahl, jumped into a nearby wooded area
while being lead ten yards behind a German guard. The men journeyed for a
period of eight days across the countryside, and got as far as the German
artillery positions when they were turned in by a German farmer. They were
then brought to Stalag 100, where they were liberated by the
British 2nd Army after a period of 10 days.
From
left to right, Howard Hedenstad, Bill Phillips (not to be confused withJoe
Phillips, who is in the story), George
Kopanda, liberated at
Stalag 100 by the British 2nd Army
(photo
courtesy Ranger Kopanda's sons)
Honored
by sons Rich, Bill, & Rob Kopanda
April
2003
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