У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Nazi POWs in Texas Were Fed Steak and Ice Cream - They Thought it Was a Trick или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
June 8th, 1943. A German POW stands in a Texas mess hall staring at more food than he's seen in four years of war. Roast beef. Real coffee. Butter. And ice cream. His first thought? "They're trying to poison us." Heinrich Kramer had survived four years in the Wehrmacht eating starvation rations. He'd watched his daily bread shrink from 700 grams to 300 grams. He'd gone days without hot food in Tunisia before his Panzer unit ran out of fuel and he was captured. Now he's at Camp Hearne, Texas—a place the locals would call "The Fritz Ritz"—and the Americans are serving him meals that look like peacetime. Three full meals a day. Seconds available. Ice cream and Coca-Cola at the canteen for 10 cents. Every instinct screams it's a trap. Nazi propaganda had told him Americans were weak, unprepared, starving from their own rationing. This abundance has to be poisoned. It has to be psychological warfare. But he's so hungry he eats it anyway. What Kramer discovers over the next two years will shatter everything he thought he knew about the war. While his mother starves in bombed-out Hamburg on 200 grams of bread a day, he's gaining 25 pounds in a prison camp. While Germany collapses into rubble, he's playing soccer, listening to camp orchestras, and buying chocolate ice cream with money he earns picking cotton. The Geneva Convention required POWs to receive the same rations as American soldiers. The cruel irony? German prisoners were eating better than American civilians dealing with rationing back home. This is the story of what happened when soldiers raised on Nazi propaganda about American weakness came face-to-face with American abundance. It's the story of men who thought ice cream was poison. Who got physically sick from eating real food after years of starvation rations. Who spent Christmas 1943 eating turkey and pie while their families huddled in bomb shelters eating nothing. And it's the story of the moment Heinrich Kramer realized Germany had already lost the war—not because of tanks or tactics, but because they were fighting an enemy with so much abundance they could feed ice cream to their prisoners. This is real history. Verified by camp records, Red Cross reports, letters, and memoirs from German POWs who lived it. This is the story they never expected anyone to believe. 📚 Sources: Camp Hearne Historical Records, Texas State Historical Association "Fritz Ritz: The Story of German POWs in Texas" Red Cross POW Reports, 1943-1946 Personal letters and memoirs from Camp Hearne prisoners National Archives POW Camp Documentation 📢 What war story should we cover next? Let us know in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe for more untold stories from military history. 👍 Like if you learned something new today. #ww2history #powcamp #worldwar2 #history #usa #ww2 ⚠️ Note: This narrative is based on historical events and archival sources. Some details have been dramatized for storytelling. For academic research, consult professional historical archives. Thanks for watching.