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In June 1944, German tank gunner Hans Müller was captured in the aftermath of D-Day and transported to the United States as a prisoner of war. Hungry, frightened, and bracing for harsh treatment, he arrived at a POW camp in Minnesota expecting the worst. What he encountered instead would completely upend his expectations — and alter the course of his life. Rather than brutality, Müller found three hot meals a day. Instead of grueling prison labor, he was assigned paid work on local farms. Rather than mistreatment, he experienced conditions that, in some ways, surpassed what he had known in his own army. While many American families faced wartime rationing, German POWs were sometimes served meals like roast beef and apple pie. This is the true story of how roughly 3,000 German prisoners of war were held in Minnesota during World War II, why many described their captivity as unexpectedly humane, and why around 400 chose not to return to Germany after the war. It’s a story of surprising compassion in a time of global conflict — of second chances, reconciliation, and former enemies who eventually became American citizens. From the battlefields of North Africa to the quiet farms of the American Midwest, this is the journey of one Wehrmacht soldier who went from fighting the United States to building a new life within it — a transformation that seemed unimaginable in wartime, yet proved that even in conflict, humanity can endure. 📢 What war story should we explore next? Tell us in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe for more untold military history stories. 👍 Like if you discovered something new today. #ww2history #powcamp #worldwar2 #history #ww2 #usa ⚠️ Note: This narrative is based on documented historical events and archival sources. Certain elements may be dramatized for storytelling purposes. For academic research, consult professional historians and official archives. .