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Italian POWs in America: From Starvation to Paradise The shocking true story of 51,000 Italian prisoners of war who arrived in America expecting punishment and found abundance beyond imagination. After surviving starvation rations in North Africa and brutal treatment under French-Moroccan guards, captured Italian soldier Virgilio Razzo stepped into an American POW camp in Louisiana and couldn't believe what he saw: eggs, bacon, steak, oranges, real coffee, hot showers, clean barracks, and a pack of cigarettes waiting at his table. Food he hadn't seen in three years. Treatment better than his own army had ever given him. This is the untold story of what happened when 51,000 Italian POWs discovered that their American captors fed them 2,500 calories a day, paid them wages, built them theaters and soccer fields, and treated them with a dignity they had never known. It's the story of men who hid bread in rafters because they feared the abundance would end. Of prisoners who cried when they tasted their first orange in years. Of enemy soldiers who became so valued by American farmers that communities begged the government not to send them home. When Italy switched sides in 1943, 90% of these prisoners volunteered to help America win the war. They fell in love with American women. They built friendships that lasted decades. They painted frescoes in churches that still stand today. And approximately 2,000 of them chose to return to America after the war, unable to forget the country that had shown them what they would call "almost paradise." From the cattle cars of North Africa to Sunday dinners with Italian-American families, this is the story of Virgilio Razzo and thousands like him—men who were captured by the enemy and treated better than they'd ever been treated by their own country, and who spent the rest of their lives trying to be worthy of that kindness. 📢 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 #worldwar2 #powcamp #ww2 #history #usa ⚠️ 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.