Mayrock Harald - German WWII Veteran Interview

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Making History Project

Making History Project

7 місяців тому

WWII Veteran Harald Mayrock was interviewed in Lima, Peru on February 10, 2015. Gefreiter Mayrock was a German Paratrooper who served in a heavy mortar platoon with the 7th Paratrooper Division, 1st Company of the Luftwaffe. Harald was born in Lima, Peru to German parents. As fate would have it, Harald was sent to a prestigious school in Germany when WWII broke out and was drafted into the Luftwaffe. Harald ends his story with how he was captured and was able to finally make his way back to Lima to reunite with his family. @MakingHistoryProject

КОМЕНТАРІ: 642
@dennispfeifer7788
@dennispfeifer7788 6 місяців тому
I gotta read this man's book...I sure hope he wrote one! This is better than a Hollywood movie!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 6 місяців тому
Thanks for watching and your comment!
@user-it5wt8sj5y
@user-it5wt8sj5y 5 місяців тому
Thank you so very much for your interview with this very intelligent and interesting man. As a Canadian born of German parents, I see so many parallels....except my parents and ancestors go back many generations from Poland...so, Polish was also spoken in my home...but mostly German. My father was drafted into the Polish Air Force....and this story I remember well...BUT, now they are no longer alive, and I now am older...I have questions. Anyways, he took the (Polish) plane, flew to German occupied Romania (Bucharest)...landed, defected, and switched sides, as his loyalties were German...only to be sent to the Russian Front. NOW!!! I wish I would have asked, but no one is alive anymore to answer two questions: Why would the "Polish" put a "German" in a Polish fighter plane, and why did the Germans not shoot him down? 3/4 into your documentary, Mr. Harald confirmed and answered another piece of the puzzle for me. After the war ended, and both my parents, "refugees," yet my father with "German" papers...I kind of knew the story with regard to curfiew...but... I did not know France was there as well. Now I understand. He decided to walk by night (I was always told to Belgium) to find his friend. Maybe not totally true, or I don't remember correctly. He was captured by the French, not sent to the mines, but, my father was (in German) a "Meister Schlosser" and VERY good at his trade. He was a prisoner of war in a factory. Treated very well, I might add. I now understand how that really may have come to be. I still have his release papers (in French) that not until a couple of years ago had translated by a friend from Quebec Canada. Kind of the same. His rank "Sgt.". I was told the Sgt. in battle was shot, and they put my dad in charge. I thank God he wasn't SS. That I am sure of. I have not missed a Rememberance ceremony here in Canada. I am so grateful for the soldiers who fought for our freedoms ❤ Thank you so much. I understand so much more. You did an amazing job interviewing a most interesting, humble, and intelligent man.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 5 місяців тому
Thank you for watching and sharing your father's related story as well. @@user-it5wt8sj5y
@per-eriksjodin8361
@per-eriksjodin8361 4 місяці тому
​@@MakingHistoryProjectqqqq
@randyjenkins8743
@randyjenkins8743 4 місяці тому
​​@@user-it5wt8sj5ywhy? if he was "ss" you'd know your father was the best of the best
@Intel-i7-9700k
@Intel-i7-9700k 3 місяці тому
It's crucial to make these kind of interviews with WW2 veterans. In a few decades there won't be any left 😢
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for that comment. This is why we do what we do!
@toberrdrawforc
@toberrdrawforc 3 місяці тому
“In a few DECADES there won’t be any left? Mathematics is a challenge for you? A) The youngest WW2 veteran alive in 2015 (when this interview was conducted) was 84 years old. B) “In a few DECADES” will mean these ages are 20 years past death, by a 98.33 percentile. Please attempt to think prior to posting comments. Thank you!
@toberrdrawforc
@toberrdrawforc 3 місяці тому
@@MakingHistoryProject And you approve this lower minded post? What a shame!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Interesting response. I am not sure what your dispute is. The comment was to strike home the idea that Veterans are passing as a prolific rate due to age and their stories should be preserved. I do not think the comment was a mathematical exercise, which is certainly not how I read it. The point is that today any WWII Veterans are quite old. Assuming a soldier got involved late in the war in 1945 at the age of 16, that Veteran would be 95 years old. I would suggest that would be the youngest WWII Veteran you could find alive today. Further, these are the facts from Statista as to the annual projected number of living U.S. WWII Veterans www.statista.com/statistics/1333701/us-military-ww2-veterans-living-estimate/ That study suggests that 226K veterans were alive in 2022, 87K in 2024, and they are rapidly declining from there. @@toberrdrawforc
@Intel-i7-9700k
@Intel-i7-9700k 3 місяці тому
@@MakingHistoryProject Thank you for your response, those numbers are indeed quickly declining 😢 One of my customers is a 100 year old veteran from the Netherlands, and the war he fought in is still so alive and active in his mind. Really goes to show what an offer these young men made to go to the battlefield. As for that critical comment, I don't think much can be said to it in response, this indeed is not about mathematics 🤣
@wightclaudia
@wightclaudia Місяць тому
We desperately need more German veteran interviews.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching.
@curtisrandolph1887
@curtisrandolph1887 4 місяці тому
Harald spoke German, Spanish, and English during the interview. Pretty impressive.
@sup8857
@sup8857 4 місяці тому
He had great language teachers. But chemistry? Apparently, not so much.
@ApriliaRacer14
@ApriliaRacer14 4 місяці тому
@@sup8857He did not appear fond of his chemistry teacher 😂😆🤣
@realitymatters8720
@realitymatters8720 4 місяці тому
Impressive for an american perhabs ! I speak 4 languages fluently, and 3 more where I get by, and im not unusual in Europe, most speak at least 3, and the worst educated userly still speak 2, their native tounge and English ! What is impressive about him is that he seems to have gone through real trauma, and managed to build a life afterwards !
@brez-ed9dd
@brez-ed9dd 4 місяці тому
Very evasive, with a selective memory.
@markcleveland8338
@markcleveland8338 4 місяці тому
Every German soldier from WW2 I've ever seen interviewed conveniently never was around any of the brutal sh!t they were famous for...which is really the only part i am interested in. How one is part of such a dark thing ? And they just point fingers at other Germans... You'd think at least one of these guys would just be honest.
@steve24550
@steve24550 4 місяці тому
Quite rare to hear the other side of the story, first hand. Thank you.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment.
@derin111
@derin111 4 місяці тому
It’s striking to reflect just how young he was! My Grandfather also fought in the Wehrmacht having joined voluntarily in 1938. After his time in the RAD, he fought as an infantry man in Poland and France before being wounded out by a bullet through both legs in Russia in 1943. BUT…he was much older having been born in 1910 and so was already 28 when he joined and 33 by the time he was wounded.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and sharing your story
@michaelwakeford2336
@michaelwakeford2336 4 місяці тому
Much respect and many thanks for sharing. My own father was in the RAF as junior officer. He could never understand that had he been born in Frankfürt he would have been in the Luftwaffe. I have always been very appreciative of those on all sides of that conflict who can share the truth with my generation. Born in 1951 and now 72 years old I had been part of the Love and Peace generation, probably obsessed with peace after having been born on rations and raised in the ashes of the war. I find it very healing to hear veterans gifting us all with their memories with the propaganda from all sides removed.it really is a tonic and I thank this Chanel and particularly Herr Harald for his wonderful candour.
@razorback7158
@razorback7158 4 місяці тому
Dude still has all his marbles , sharp as a tack
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@wittelsbacher27cameron16
@wittelsbacher27cameron16 2 місяці тому
German the smartest DNA on the planet the Founders, thinkers, creators! They betrayed Germany ! Masacered Germany ! Lied about Germany! GB and America are the war mongers of the planet not Germany!
@ousmanesow2916
@ousmanesow2916 4 місяці тому
His discipline as a soldier could be felt all along throughout the interview. Thanks for the work you provided.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback
@_zoinks2554
@_zoinks2554 3 місяці тому
That's upper class behavior. Sadly this is not something you see these days.
@Dechieftian
@Dechieftian 4 місяці тому
A first hand account of life in Germany during WWII as described by ordinary people gives the listener in 2024 a real sense of what people lived through in this turbulent time. The raw emotion of what was experienced makes for a fascinating insight into the real and fearful world of living with war. It is in addition, a great teacher of the need to avoid war and find ways to make our world a better place for all our peoples in all our contries. Thanks to the Making History Project for this wonderful series of oral accounts from people who actually lived through these geo-political conflicts and sharing their stories from which - with little difficulty - we can feel empathy for those voices who endured so much.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and for your thoughtful comment. Much appreciated.
@peterandersen1378
@peterandersen1378 4 місяці тому
Very interesting interview. This gentleman was at and survived the crossroads of history!🇨🇦👍🏻
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@Frank-qs3pe
@Frank-qs3pe 4 місяці тому
You can see how proud he was of his accomplishments post war and he should be. A very interesting,educated and insightful man. As long as people have purpose in life they continue to live.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your kind comments.
@cristianpopescu78
@cristianpopescu78 4 місяці тому
Awesome! My Girlfriend works here in Germany in takecare of old people institution.Some of these heroes still here.They are extraordinary people .
@mikethomas4598
@mikethomas4598 4 місяці тому
"Hero's"? Wow!
@tiredextremely
@tiredextremely 4 місяці тому
​@@mikethomas4598yeah dude. They fought for their country, theyre somebodys heroes. If you wanna be confrontational, tell me your country and ill tell some fucked up stuff they did in war
@marthae9338
@marthae9338 4 місяці тому
We don't generally refer to those who fought for Germany in World War II as "heroes" . We tend to throw that word around quite a bit..I would suspect most soldiers don't see themselves as "heroes". Even Medal of Honor recipients shrug off that notion. This man does not strike me as a "Nazi". Not every German soldier was. @@mikethomas4598
@wallykloubek4079
@wallykloubek4079 4 місяці тому
@@mikethomas4598..yes, heroes...the German soldier fought bravely to the very end ...no historian denies that..cheers🍷🇨🇦
@danielcombs3207
@danielcombs3207 4 місяці тому
In the U.S. the institution you’re talking about is referred to as an assisted living facility. It’s just different terminology. I’ve met elderly American veterans who fought in Europe, North Africa and the Pacific campaigns. Very brave men for certain. It was a horrible war for all involved. Hopefully we never have a Third World War.
@Ed99924
@Ed99924 3 місяці тому
Fantastic interview with an extraordinary gentleman. They don't 'make 'em' like this anymore...the 'old school ' values, ethics & courtesies are so evident with this fine man...Very refreshing & inspiring. Thanks for a great interview !
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback. Much appreciated.
@TheParadisecove
@TheParadisecove 4 місяці тому
A beautiful human with a beautiful story of faithful duty and honor and intelligence...bravo Herr Mayrock..und Gott segne dich..
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment.
@michaelallen1396
@michaelallen1396 4 місяці тому
That area around Lake Constance and Garmisch are spectacularly beautiful.
@bikenavbm1229
@bikenavbm1229 4 місяці тому
Thank you very much for your memories Harald and the project allowing it here
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback!
@hilding2063
@hilding2063 3 місяці тому
He must have been about 88 or 89 years in that interview, amazing memory. The school he has been enrolled to is famous to this day. His dad must have had good connections. Todays Germany is a nation without Patriotism ashamed of itself, which isn't helpful with the current challenges in this world. Hard to imagine Germans to volunteer for anything.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@richardsimms251
@richardsimms251 3 місяці тому
Germany and other countries were TRULY BAD then, but Germany has resurrected itself and is now doing very good things in the world. RS. Canada
@wolfiewolfdog9771
@wolfiewolfdog9771 7 годин тому
It is a shame isnt it, Germany lost it’s pride and now without spine
@Llkdd1987
@Llkdd1987 3 місяці тому
Thank you for posting this.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback
@patrickoconnor1077
@patrickoconnor1077 4 місяці тому
Growing up my neighbor and fishing buddy was a WWII veteran a united states marine. A one time DI at paris Island and a veteran of gudal canal and iwo jima. As i got older he shared some stories with me. He was a good man and a good friend. I didnt know either of my grandfathers and he was probably the closest to it for me. Need more of these interviews with this generation.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment. This is why we do what we do.
@SvetlanaVladimirova8590
@SvetlanaVladimirova8590 3 місяці тому
Thank you very much for this interview. It was truly fascinating.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment.
@kingcobra7565
@kingcobra7565 4 місяці тому
These interviews help us better understand the War. Thank you Mr. Mayrock Harald..
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and sharing your comment
@youhavealotofnerve
@youhavealotofnerve 4 місяці тому
A good story and think of all he went through on the "other side" it is nice to hear. Love the conversation in Spanish, not sure if it is personal but for historical perspective it is great to leave in as it personalizes the message.
@neilldn74
@neilldn74 3 місяці тому
This was fascinating. Thank you.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback
@javasrevenge7121
@javasrevenge7121 4 місяці тому
At first I have to say this upload has a great sound, secondly this is an interesting story by Mayrock, thirdly the interviewer is doing a great job. You have another subscriber.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback. Much appreciated.
@milonguerobill
@milonguerobill Місяць тому
I disagree, Both mic's should be on both channels not one guy talking into one ear and the other into the other.
@alicejohnson8751
@alicejohnson8751 3 місяці тому
It's amazing that his account is so fluent considering he is 96 and giving an interview which is not in his native language.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@SeattleRex
@SeattleRex 3 місяці тому
This was fascinating. Thank you so much for making it happen. I hope this man is still alive. It will be a sad day when our last connections to this era are gone.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching
@unitedstatesdale
@unitedstatesdale 4 місяці тому
New to your channel.. Its fantastic. Thank you
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for that feedback!
@realgrilledsushi
@realgrilledsushi 4 місяці тому
No way, this guy is a Fallschirmjager vet? Awesome! Subscribing to this channel!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for subscribing!
@kenhart8771
@kenhart8771 3 місяці тому
Fantastic interview and historical events. So many destinies caught up in world events.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback!
@daqt6079
@daqt6079 4 місяці тому
Outstanding.
@atunis5804
@atunis5804 4 місяці тому
excellent interviewee
@preservingthestories
@preservingthestories Місяць тому
Outstanding interview!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching and your comment!
@preservingthestories
@preservingthestories Місяць тому
@@MakingHistoryProject of course! I wish more people were doing these interviews! These stories need to be recorded.
@williambradford352
@williambradford352 4 місяці тому
What an outstanding interview with a German soldier who served during WWII as a teenager. His comments that included his early experience of being a member of the Hitler Youth, the RAD organization and on to the Luftwaffe in combat is amazing. The man is a legend!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comments!
@cookml
@cookml 4 місяці тому
And yet they set on fire barns full of women and children. So much so that he could not recall how to say ‘fire’ in German.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Interesting comment. Did you watch the interview? @@cookml
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
@@cookml They does not equal He.
@Calidore1
@Calidore1 4 місяці тому
​@@cookmlnot sure I saw that bit, sounds unlike him.
@randyrosy
@randyrosy 4 місяці тому
Funny how people are unable to comprehend that someone is able to speak a foreign language whether he be a ww2 veteran or someone else. People were educated also at that time
@ManiSRao-bt3xw
@ManiSRao-bt3xw 4 місяці тому
It's an American thing. America's huge & it's culture is all about assimilation - by forgetting the 'old' language and sticking with English. It's just built this way :(
@ApriliaRacer14
@ApriliaRacer14 4 місяці тому
I would say better educated then.
@griftinggamer
@griftinggamer 4 місяці тому
​@@ManiSRao-bt3xw There is no assimilation anymore. America as an empire is just a colony for foreign nations at this time.
@Budd631
@Budd631 4 місяці тому
@@ManiSRao-bt3xwit’s called geography. Germany borders 9 other countries within driving distance.
@simonellison9271
@simonellison9271 7 місяців тому
Thanks for story
@leesaunders1930
@leesaunders1930 Місяць тому
Great interview you give this gentleman enough time to answer and explain your questions. 👏👏👏
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback!
@podaly
@podaly 3 місяці тому
Fascinating! I found the recollections of just after the war's end...how chaotic... compelling. Glad he found his parents safe.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching
@amham48
@amham48 4 місяці тому
Absolutely fascinating interview. Of course, "nobody was a Nazi" but this soldier appeared to be caught up in the war and did the best he could given the circumstances. Very lucid given his age.
@_zoinks2554
@_zoinks2554 3 місяці тому
There was plenty of opposition to the national socialists in old Germany. Especially from the old elite and communist element. Just look at the US currently. Do you think the entire country is supportive of the Biden government?
@taylorbarrett384
@taylorbarrett384 3 місяці тому
"nobody was a Nazi"
@joseplaza9442
@joseplaza9442 4 місяці тому
Fantastic man
@Chrisamos412
@Chrisamos412 4 місяці тому
The interviewer had great questions. Very interesting story, thank you for sharing it 🫡
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback!
@digitalbase9396
@digitalbase9396 4 місяці тому
This interview reminds me of Otto Renger whom I have met and was enlisted at the same age into the fallshirmjager unit
@brentthompson9597
@brentthompson9597 3 місяці тому
Incredible.
@zachhoward9099
@zachhoward9099 3 місяці тому
Incredible interview! Thank You for this! Interesting to note, the army he spoke of his father liberating Munich in was one of many groups known as Freikorps, a very interesting movement in the immediate post WW1 years, this gentleman’s father was a Freikorps soldier as well as a WW1 Veteran, it was quite common as actually the bulk of the various Freikorps were comprised of demobilized WW1 vets, the fact the he voluntarily enlisted in WW2 is pretty incredible in its own right so he was a World War 1, World War 2 and a Freikorps veteran, incredible. Again, Thank You for interviewing this gentleman
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@AnotherWS6
@AnotherWS6 3 місяці тому
You're really just a S-y person. @@MakingHistoryProject
@johncourtneidge
@johncourtneidge 4 місяці тому
Thank-you.
@kazkazimierz1742
@kazkazimierz1742 4 місяці тому
Really interesting story. I wish he had said something about his sisters who stayed in Chile when he went to Germany.
@richardsimms251
@richardsimms251 3 місяці тому
Very, very interesting video. Thank you. Great interview. What a tragedy. RS. Canada
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching
@johnmolloy4694
@johnmolloy4694 4 місяці тому
Well done, Harald!
@popcornhead3479
@popcornhead3479 3 місяці тому
The man is an absolute treasure, so much real experience his stories are priceless! Love these types of videos but hard to find
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@stephenbudd3771
@stephenbudd3771 4 місяці тому
Fascinating… he must have been retreating through Twente in Holland into Germany towards Lingen. My mother was 26 and lived in Denekamp and vividly recalled the German retreat on the road outside her house very close to the border on the road to Nordhorn, the next town to Lingen. It was the main road back into Germany and Denekamp had been one of the first towns invaded by the Nazis. She recalled being beaten by SS and her brothers having to be hidden in the woods behind the house De Borg, you can look it up, it’s still there. It is a magnificent house and was used as a Gestapo brothel during the war and as a British officers quarters on liberation. I wonder if he walked past that house, quite possible . I have pictures of Scottish Highlanders tanks in the drive way still. … my grandfather was made Mayor by the British (he spoke English) and was given the job of locking up local fascist collaborators. …. history eh !!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and providing some additional historical context.
@DPris-ko9tn
@DPris-ko9tn 4 місяці тому
Fascinating interview. Looking forward to listening to the others. Just one thing: Luftwaffe is pronounced Luft - Vaf-fe & not Luft-Waf
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback.
@peterwhitaker4038
@peterwhitaker4038 4 місяці тому
i like to hear old soldiers telling their stories no matter what side they were on. there is a fascinating you tube called 'Lions Led By Donkeys' in which you hear many World war one soldiers from Great Britain (all dead now) talking about the battle of the Somme 1916. it also has good footage, music and explanations of what happened.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for sharing.
@NordicTG
@NordicTG 4 місяці тому
Very Good to se Interview from German Vets or their perspective & also hear about how they grew up, I assume by now he is no longer with us, but I also think his Story could have been made into a Hollywood Movie, shame though Hollywood dont really make that kind of Movies though.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for that comment!
@Trenton2006gaming
@Trenton2006gaming Місяць тому
It’s amazing he was able to tell his story
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching and your comment
@Birdynmnm
@Birdynmnm 4 місяці тому
What a great storyteller he is
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching.
@vblake530530
@vblake530530 4 місяці тому
This guy’s stoicism is incredible. Talks about reuniting with his family as if ran to some acquaintances at the local gas station , picking up a pack of chewing gum.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching. It could be individual or cultural. Interesting observation.
@MaxVonStark
@MaxVonStark 4 місяці тому
Fascinating his journey from SA to Germany......and then back....
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@Americal1970
@Americal1970 4 місяці тому
Thank you Mr. Harald and the interviewer for recording Mr. Hs experience. This made me think back several years. I apologize to everyone, I don't remember his name. He is English and was writing about the Hitler Youth. He was telling how his research interviews with the now grown up H. Y. members (he was the same age in London ) had completely changed 180°. Much to his suprise. The only example I can remember he gave was "I grew up in a alley with a dirty face hungry most of the time with nothing to do but fight and shoplift" Back to Mr. Hs interview Wow I like when he answers the phone. He speaks cat quick, I have no idea what he said, but it fits this interview perfectly. -I think -. >>>Mr H.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment.
@joselinares2084
@joselinares2084 4 місяці тому
Excelente información Histórica. Saludos respetuosos y cordiales desde California Capitán de Fragata Asimilado Doctor Jose Rafael Linares Badillo.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment
@mariar4431
@mariar4431 Місяць тому
A lovely gentleman. A good and brave soldier and decent man with an incredible story.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching!
@greenrosenz
@greenrosenz 4 місяці тому
Just a normal lad, lucky to have been born 1927. Called up at an earlier age than England. My English father, born late 1928, was not coscipted till 1946. Luckily not involved in active duty as he was RAF. Later years of war was a post office telegram lad delivering post D Day messages. Householders hated him cycling into their streets, as can be understood. A very interesting interview.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thanks for watching and sharing the memory for your father
@TheSpritz0
@TheSpritz0 4 місяці тому
LATE in the war many ad-hoc Luftwaffe Units were designated "Paratrooper Units" just because the Colonel or General in charge was in charge of one of these units PREVIOUSLY... of course, being Luftwaffe they wore pretty much the same uniform. MANY had never jumped from a plane before, or after... After the Stalingrad defeat, Germany was no longer on the offensive and training was not the same, even fighter pilots training time was dramatically reduced. I read Adolf Galland's book and he said Gasoline, Ammunition, and even replacement Aircraft were at all factors...
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for adding your comment
@paulrimmer391
@paulrimmer391 4 місяці тому
Love his sense of humour. I could fight in the war, but not allowed in the movies. Lol.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@michaelshortell1482
@michaelshortell1482 3 місяці тому
I hope the interviewer kept his day job! His interviewing skills, if any, at home this da5.
@sarahreese4285
@sarahreese4285 3 місяці тому
1:45:10 I absolutely love that the phone call wasn't edited out. 😂😂
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching! It is what makes each interview unique.
@garywells3763
@garywells3763 4 місяці тому
Many lessons here for people at any time to learn. Foremostly, the more power that concentrates into fewer and fewer hands, your government can be trusted less and less to tell you the truth.
@malcolmclayton6651
@malcolmclayton6651 4 місяці тому
My father was a front line observer with the Canadian Army WW 2 . His views were similar to this gentlemen .
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and sharing.
@DocM.
@DocM. 3 місяці тому
I really find the German soldier interviews so interesting. It's so rare to hear their stories. I feel like due to the atrocities, they were not given the opportunity to freely talk about their experiences
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching.
@FriedrichSchuessler
@FriedrichSchuessler 4 місяці тому
very lucky that his whole family survived. and he was very young to go to war - i nearly can't imagine that, but that was the reality in that time sadly .... but he had good education and made his future with hard work. not asking for work life balance. hard to think when was 17 or 18 i am thinking of drinking beer and girls .... he was although lucky not being on the eastern front.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment.
@damnjustassignmeone
@damnjustassignmeone 3 місяці тому
Incredible story
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment
@_zoinks2554
@_zoinks2554 3 місяці тому
We could have had a western uptopia but instead we chose usury and degeneracy, which ironically started in Germany as well. Very good historical interview. These few remaining people will be gone very soon.
@Llkdd1987
@Llkdd1987 3 місяці тому
Usury is the most interesting one indeed
@jeffthomas3707
@jeffthomas3707 4 місяці тому
This is the face of the average German soldier. Not a Nazi, not a war criminal, not a bad person, just a man doing his duty.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching the interview.
@georgewilkie3580
@georgewilkie3580 3 місяці тому
Jeff Thomas, Thank You sincerely for You very knowledgeable comment.
@jcarby86
@jcarby86 3 місяці тому
whats his duty ? invading foreign countries and killing jews ?
@TheAnthoula14
@TheAnthoula14 3 місяці тому
Agree. I think we tend to forget what a large country Germany is. Out of all those millions and millions of people, not all were criminals.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for your comment@@TheAnthoula14
@frankdillon7958
@frankdillon7958 3 місяці тому
Incredible what these men went through A lesson on the futility and horror of war. If only never again 😢
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching.
@brianthomas3465
@brianthomas3465 3 місяці тому
I'd love to hear about his life after the war. Kids wife. Etc. I could set and listen to this treasure forever ❤
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback
@ManiSRao-bt3xw
@ManiSRao-bt3xw 4 місяці тому
His boarding school -Schule Schloss Salem- is famous. Founded by the same German Jewish educator who was forced into exile; who then founded the boarding school where Prince Philip & King Charles studied.
@ApriliaRacer14
@ApriliaRacer14 4 місяці тому
Can you share your source of information? My Oma was the accountant for the school and I have an alternate understanding of the founding of the school.
@rickyleeincali5375
@rickyleeincali5375 4 місяці тому
The German-Jewish educator/founder's name was Kurt Hahn, who was briefly imprisoned, then exiled to the UK. His crime: Asking the students and faculty of the school to choose between Hitler and Salem. (source: wikipedia)
@richardcopeland3226
@richardcopeland3226 3 місяці тому
Amazing to hear his recollections, I do feel that the interviewer could have used a little less aggressive interview style.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching
@ApriliaRacer14
@ApriliaRacer14 4 місяці тому
Ha ha…my Oma was the accountant for Salem school. Lived there in 1981 with my Oma for a year. Gruß aus California.
@pirated8557
@pirated8557 3 місяці тому
Respect Harald
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@annawhitis4251
@annawhitis4251 4 місяці тому
He is a good man & family. Kevin Phoenix
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your comment
@Ken_Jepsen
@Ken_Jepsen 4 місяці тому
How likable he is!
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching!
@asintonic
@asintonic 3 місяці тому
I love the fact that he refused to say certain things even after being asked.
@swiftcee266
@swiftcee266 Місяць тому
His-story is written by the victor - never forget that. It is refreshing to hear this man's account of the war from his perspective. I will never respect the German end game and also the factual atrocities that were perpetrated on innocence. But they were for the best part soldiers and they had a job to do and by all accounts the Wehrmacht was a very capable and good fighting army. You can never take that away from them.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject Місяць тому
Thank you for watching and your comment
@loompadavis951
@loompadavis951 3 місяці тому
Very interesting look into an ordinary serviceman's experiences in the closing days of the war. The only thing that bothered me was that the person asking the questions didn't pronounce the "e" at the end of the word "luftwaffe." Kind of a fingers on the chalkboard thing. But good work, thanks.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and your feedback
@zaknoten7854
@zaknoten7854 4 місяці тому
Its impressive how good his english is for a ww2 german veteran
@griftinggamer
@griftinggamer 4 місяці тому
English as a businessman.
@wittelsbacher27cameron16
@wittelsbacher27cameron16 2 місяці тому
Well Germans are the most educated folks , honored manners people with integrity and a tremendous intelligence! That’s why they envy the Germans. They made up Propaganda to have a reason to attack ! USA and GB dud war crimes of the finest!
@tomdonahue4224
@tomdonahue4224 3 місяці тому
I cant believe his dad, being in his mid-40's and being a Sergeant on the Eastern Front.
@only5186
@only5186 3 місяці тому
Ever read any books from German soldiers on the Eastern front? Man brutal brutal brutal! Awesome reads though. My favorite is Blood Red Snow! There's another called The Forgotten Soldier that's really good.
@tomdonahue4224
@tomdonahue4224 3 місяці тому
@@only5186 I read Guy Sajier's book. Rough stuff
@carlyleporter5388
@carlyleporter5388 4 місяці тому
Interesting interview with the exception of the occasional incoherent question.
@britgerus4503
@britgerus4503 4 місяці тому
Sehr gut gemacht Señor….
@jefesalsero
@jefesalsero 4 місяці тому
Ja, das ist gut - sehr gut!
@apimyfriend
@apimyfriend 3 місяці тому
Anyone know what he was speaking in Spanish at the end there?
@HelmetOfHonor
@HelmetOfHonor 4 місяці тому
Hello, I am on the search to interview the last living WW2 veterans how do you find WW2 Veterans, especially German ones?
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
I would search for Veteran organizations to which they may belong.
@HelmetOfHonor
@HelmetOfHonor 4 місяці тому
​@@MakingHistoryProject thank you, how did you find this gentleman? 😊
@marcwinfield1541
@marcwinfield1541 2 місяці тому
Amazing... you met this gentleman in Lima, Peru! That's out of the way...
@jamesbetker6862
@jamesbetker6862 4 місяці тому
Mr. Mayrock is right when he speaks of Liebensraum or living space.
@ekesandras1481
@ekesandras1481 3 місяці тому
what you mean is "Lebensraum"; Liebensraum would be loving space. One letter makes a big difference here.
@marcwinfield1541
@marcwinfield1541 2 місяці тому
Not entirely accurate this assessment. The decision to attack the USSR was based on the imminent attack the USSR / Stalin was about to launch on the Axis forces beginning on the border of occupied Poland on or about 10 July 1941
@josesegura5227
@josesegura5227 4 місяці тому
I laugh at the ignorance of people who are surprised to know how capable human beings can speak different languages. Probably in Europe is more common for people to learn different languages because of proximity and also business deals. Knowing another language gives an opportunity to know more. Knowledge doesn't make poorer but enriches your life and can not be taken away .😊😊😊
@ethnodagger9296
@ethnodagger9296 12 днів тому
Nobody is surprised just slightly impressed, as anyone would be by a man who can speak three languages fluently.
@deenloon
@deenloon 4 місяці тому
He tried to correct your mispronunciation of the word 'Luftwaffe' but you just carried on saying it wrong. Otherwise, a great interview.
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
Thank you for watching.
@marlenemanion9776
@marlenemanion9776 3 місяці тому
He sure remembers facts better than I could ever do!! What a sad time in history:-(
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching
@hawallttibian2996
@hawallttibian2996 3 місяці тому
thanks for your service. europe will never forget
@gtownboi3877
@gtownboi3877 3 місяці тому
We need men like him
@vicschauberger2737
@vicschauberger2737 4 місяці тому
After D -day and fighting increasesd on the continent , German mortar fire was responsible for between 2/3 and 3/4 of all allied casualties. The Germans had a very sophisticated strategy of luring the Allies into an area where concentrated mortar fire , directed by forward observers ,could be effected . This man is describing his participation in the most lethal part of the war for the Western Allies .
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
He fought on the Eastern Front.
@vicschauberger2737
@vicschauberger2737 4 місяці тому
@@MakingHistoryProject No he didn't . After a short stint on the Austrian Yugoslav border , he fought as a forward observer for heavy mortar detachment against Montgomery's 8th army in Holland . You're the interviewer ?
@Smudgeroon74
@Smudgeroon74 4 місяці тому
@vicshauberger2737 I hope you are informed enough to know that Operation Barbarossa(June 1941) was a 6 nation attack. Along with Germany there was Croatia, Italy(60,000 men), Hungary, Romania, Finland and 47,000 Spanish soldiers. There was also 2 divisions of Belgian soldiers. So by May 1941 170 divisions of Soviet Union soldiers were congregating at Germany's eastern front(don't forget that the eastern half of Poland was occupied by the Red army, getting ready to invade Europe. Barbarossa was a direct attempt to destroy the threat of Bolshevism. The Soviet Union were carrying out atrocities in eastern Poland when they invaded in Sept 1939 and they captured 15,000 Polish military officers and took them to the Katyn forest in Smolensk and executed them. I acknowledge you say that Germany inflicted massive casualties on British, American, Canadian and French troops when they invaded Germany after D-day. Do you know that the Polish president Marshall Edward Rydz-Smigley and his foreign minister Josef Beck refused to have a peaceful dialogue with Germany in 1939 to resolve the problematic situation in Danzig and eastern Prussia. Marshall Smigley was under the influence of U.S president Roosevelt and he was told don't make any deals with Hitler. I'm afraid this interviewer is not being accurate because he makes reference to "Liebensraum". Germany did not invade the Soviet Union for that reason. Barbarossa went ahead in June 1941 because the Soviet Union posed a grave threat to the peace and security of Europe. I said already the Reds were getting ready to invade Europe! This is why the European coalition headed by Germany and Italy captured so many Soviet soldiers in the early stages of the invasion from June to August 1941.. it's good listening to this old German man telling his experiences but by saying that the story of German minorities being att*acked and murd*ered by press enraged mobs and militia in Poland, was invented he's putting false idead into the minds of people watching this interview.
@vicschauberger2737
@vicschauberger2737 4 місяці тому
@@Smudgeroon74 Nobody's arguing that point and you're preaching to the choir when describing Germany's motives for invading the Soviet Union . I would only add that the Soviets had two million forward positioned paratroopers in June 1941. Paratroops are primarily offensive in nature , if not solely . The Soviets had hoped the war in the West would've been a protracted one, whereby the wearing down of Germany , England and France to the extent that any subsequent Soviet invasion of the West would essentially be nothing more than a mopping up exercise . The size of the Soviet paratroop forces in June 1941 was approx. two million , most of which were forward positioned . Roughly 10 times the size of the rest of the world's armies combined. This underscores the offensive posture of Soviet forces at that time. The reparations that caused Germany's hyperinflation not withstanding . I would even venture to add that the Weimar policies addressing that hyperinflation of the 1920's was in direct observance of the Communist atrocities occurring in Russia . The theory being , even though workers will be paid with wheelbarrows of cash , they'll still be employed and we might avoid those same atrocities that would occur due to massive unemployment . Hitler's rise to power was directly a result of this political and economic climate . By no means am I excusing Nazi atrocities , but National Socialism was directly born out of the threat of Bolshevism . My initial post was meant to add detail to Mayrock Harald's war activities .
@Smudgeroon74
@Smudgeroon74 4 місяці тому
@@vicschauberger2737 well when you say the Reds had 2 million soldiers forward positioned, whereabouts was this? I know for a fact that the Soviet Union had 170 divisions(1,000 men in a division) of troopers at Poland's eastern border and Romania's east aswell. They were not battle ready and were waiting for further instructions. These soldiers were getting ready for a full-scale European invasion! What book did you read this from, if don't mind my asking. Thanks
@samspencer582
@samspencer582 4 місяці тому
A real hero.
@maciejniedzielski7496
@maciejniedzielski7496 3 місяці тому
01:12:15 to explain some viewers and confirm what hé is trying to explain. As some historians English and Polish stated around Wilhelmshaven (Schleswig-Holstein) German soldiers and unités where left by British to guard themselves and administrateur themselves several months after war
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Thank you for watching and adding that point.
@theprofiler8531
@theprofiler8531 5 місяців тому
He seems saddened by his experiences.
@krakrtreacysr907
@krakrtreacysr907 4 місяці тому
War does that... And he seen more than most
@johnmilligan6605
@johnmilligan6605 4 місяці тому
so he should be having helped in the murder of millions and still spreading NAZI propaganda .
@johnwheaton4636
@johnwheaton4636 4 місяці тому
Perhaps a bit insensitive of the interviewer to ask him to say the Commands to fire ... in German. I don't think he wanted to remember Very well done otherwise and a fascinating and unique story. Thank you
@keithaustin5919
@keithaustin5919 3 місяці тому
I agree with you there, a bit insensitive for sure ,I guarantee you this old timer remembered the commands but was not wanting to satisfy the interviewer request.
@Alex-lg6nz
@Alex-lg6nz 3 місяці тому
You can stick your sensitivity where the sun don't shine, Nazi lover. It's totally cool to destroy Soviet memorials and rewrite history, but repeating a command to fire is insensitive... This guy...
@dennisthurman2070
@dennisthurman2070 4 місяці тому
I know this was in 2015 but is this gentleman still alive by chance?
@chillinginthefrozennorth6958
@chillinginthefrozennorth6958 4 місяці тому
Probably not, unfortunately. He would be over 101 years old today.
@Jonny_Red
@Jonny_Red 4 місяці тому
He'll be 96 if he is still alive 👍
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 4 місяці тому
No unfortunately he has passed.
@chillinginthefrozennorth6958
@chillinginthefrozennorth6958 4 місяці тому
You're correct. Thanks.@@Jonny_Red
@klausschreyer7062
@klausschreyer7062 3 місяці тому
Did he Experience Hell in War Lol Every German Man Woman and Child from all the Bombs and Straiffng from Allies Fighter Planes. And after War many Allies Atrocities Committed against Germans make your Head Spin in Dis Belief
@klausschreyer7062
@klausschreyer7062 3 місяці тому
Lol he takes a Cell Phne call during Interview for Few Minutes
@MakingHistoryProject
@MakingHistoryProject 3 місяці тому
Yes, this is real life.
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