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Research Last Updated: Jul 17, 2022 - 2:13:45 PM


The Story of Colditz Castle
By Peter Eisner, SpyTalk, Jul 16, 2022
Jul 16, 2022 - 2:23:28 PM

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The star of his the Nazis’ 500-year-old fortress prison




Colditz Castlre Photo Credit:Wikimedia Commons.

Ben Macintyre specializes in revisiting and recasting stories once told, employing exhaustive research and impartial analysis, breathing new life and reality into his stories. His splendid work in the espionage sphere has drawn raves for years. One recent book, Operation Mincemeat, for example, updated and corrected the story of The Man Who Never Was, a successful British ploy that floated fake intel documents into the hands of the Nazis on a corpse dressed as a British officer.

In Macintyre’s hands, fact is limned from fiction. So, too, with Prisoners of the Castle. Readers may already have heard or read about Colditz. Escapes from it have been featured in books, movies and TV series for decades. There are many accounts from survivors of Colditz, as well as taped oral histories, along with several memoirs written by former Nazi guards. As always, McIntyre culls and sorts the varied versions and compares them with recently declassified material at the British National Archives. The result is a fine synthesis of the most complete renderings of what happened at Colditz through those war years.

Above all, Prisoners of the Castle is a tribute to the spirit of the men who lived and survived in Colditz, so many of whom never gave up their attempts to escape. As Macintyre points out, escaping was neither a duty nor expected of prisoners of war. But many of the men were fixated on getting back into battle and felt a compulsion to break out.

They clawed at walls, fashioned improbable tools, dropped from clock towers, dug a tunnel out dubbed “Le Métro,” disguised themselves as German officers by creating meticulously faked uniforms, phony mustaches and forged documents. They were smuggled out in sacks, hurled themselves into the river, went missing when they were allowed to walk beyond the gates. The prisoners of Colditz were even working on a full-scale glider in which they thought they could float away from the ramparts. It’s exhausting just to survey all their schemes.

Surprisingly, the German officer tasked with preventing escapes, Leutnant Reinhold Eggers, treated the prisoners with respect, even good humor, at the notion that they could manage to get away, even when his cat-and-mouse techniques led them to be recaptured.

Escaping the confines of Colditz by no means guaranteed safety (a “home run,” the prisoners called it) once outside the castle walls. Colditz was relatively close to the borders with Poland and Czechoslovakia, but both had been absorbed into Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. Escape meant a 400-mile trip south to Switzerland under threat of capture,  mortal exhaustion, and death.

Yet some did make it.

One of the most famous was Airey Neave, an Eton- and Oxford-educated soldier who barely survived after being wounded during the battle of Calais in May 1940. Captured and recovered from a chest wound, Neave was transferred to Colditz after he was caught trying to escape a prison in Poland.

Neave wasn’t daunted. He fashioned a German army uniform “with green collars made from baize, badges, buttons painted gray, buckles from melted lead piping, epaulettes fashioned from linoleum cut out of the bathroom floor, and belts and pistol holsters of polished cardboard.” After that he broke into an interrogation room and used a typewriter and scraps to manufacture a passport and travel papers that identified him as a Dutch immigrant worker authorized to cross borders.

That was marvelous enough, but Neave then made his escape by slipping through floorboards in the Colditz prison theater after a performance. Neave and a fellow prisoner took trains to Leipzig and beyond, skirted suspicious Germans, and made it to Switzerland in less than four days, exhausted but actually dancing their way through the snow. Once back in England, the well born Neave became a prominent leader at MI9, the secretive branch that helped thousands of Allied military personnel escape and evade capture behind enemy lines. Alas, his own luck ran out in 1979, when, serving as Margaret Thatcher’s Shadow Secretary of State, Neave was assassinated in a car bomb attack by the Irish Republican Army.

If Neave’s story sounds worthy of a separate book, it is—and it’s been done. Many others who appear in Prisoners of the Castle also deserve extensive treatment. Macintyre, however, has set out to write an encyclopedic reference of all things Colditz Castle during World War II. The author describes the ancient prison’s social environment, music, art, writing, and the strange reality that captured officers were allowed to have orderlies—enlisted men who were hardly more than indentured servants. Macintyre also digs down into the human nature of both captors and captives with skill. He makes a point of facing the reality of homosexuality among men confined to themselves for so long, and he does so respectfully.

Each of the stories is a jewel unto itself, but so many are piled into this single volume that a reader’s eyes can be taxed. No one character rises to the level of the protagonist in a discreet storyline from beginning to end. At one moment it’s British Captain Pat Reid, an early internee voted chief escapee officer, who went onto a career at MI6 and wrote his own book about Colditz. Then there’s Lt. Michael Sinclair of the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, who appears at the opening of the book in an excellent disguise as a German officer. Perhaps even Lieutenant Eggers, the German chief of security, could carry the story (but of course that would not do).

No, Macintyre appears to have decided to make Colditz Castle itself the star of the story, in which the narrative thread is the chronology of myriad escape attempts. His  attempt is exhaustive and, like many an escape plan, does not always work. Still, we revel in the victories and the survival of so many. And in the end, Macintyre strengthens our faith in the human spirit to survive, even in the darkest of times.


Source:Ocnus.net 2022

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