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As participants of the warsaw
Uprising from August till October 1944, after it‘s crushing on October
10th, 1944, 525 Polish women did arrive at sandbostel – among them 84
of officers‘ rank, but also thirteen-year old girls. They were accomodated
in the seperately fenced in Hut 90 between „Stalag“ and „Oflag“. Accustomed
to a life full of wants in the uprising’s last two months, these women
saw Sandbostel Camp as some sort of paradise !! Though the huts stood
„on posts in the water like in Venice“ they were welcomed by their country-men,
who’ve been prisoners here for five years, in decent clothes and clean
boots, with smiling faces and inviting looks. The inmates of the neighbourhood
huts did shower the girls with niceties, too:
„First the chefs did send us delicious sweets, then, oh what a miracle,
the stingy frenchmen gave us generous presents. For four girls, there
was one parcel: Beef tins, tuna, sardines, real coffee, raisins and butter.“
The Polish women did enjoy the quiet and relaxation after the stresses
of the fight and the transport: „ The only physical work is sewing, washing
and the roll-call“ ....by their male comrades, some of them did soon replace
trousers by skirts and stockings. In the end, in the camp’s church and
the hospital’s kitchen some real weddings took place. But it wasn’t as
romantic as can be thought by these words: „In the red, flickering light
of our stove ( we already own one) the dimly lit faces of women bent over
cooking pots can be seen. On a clothes-line, Dutch warm, coloured under-wear
and socks do dry. A bent head in a corner. A girl picks the lice from
a friend’s head. Next to them, some play cards on a brightly coloured
blanket. A red-cheeked girl... wool“
On Dec. 8th, 1944, the most Polish female officers had already left the
Camp with destination Oflag (Officers‘ POW Camp) IX C Molsburg close to
Erfurt in Thuringia. A few of them did stay hidden in Stalag X B to guarantee
the unity of their group. A second transport with 280 females and 35 male
NCOs left for Oberlangen in the Emsland on Dec. 18th. After being gathered
in the reception hut, the rest of the Polish women was moved, on February
2nd, 1945 to the so-called Bog Camp close to the Dutch border.
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