The recent article about Mr. Kahn in the Huffington Post is good, but there are many, many other amazing and wonderful stories about his years in the army that are not in the article. While part of the Allied government, he founded the post war Jewish community in Bamberg, and as a native German speaker was a tremendous asset to the Jews and to the Allies.
One example of a story that didn't make it into the article- Mr. Kahn had the bad luck to be assigned to a unit that was entirely composed of Southerners- from Alabama, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and so forth. Picture a young man with a German accent, coming from New York, joining this cadre of rebels. He was immediately labeled a "Damn Yankee." But this was only until they found out he was a Jew. At that point, he became a Damn Yankee Jew." They did everything to make his life miserable, until he finally picked out the biggest one among them, who hated him more than any of the others, and told him, look, we're going to fight it out. So the other one put up his hands and began boxing. Mr. Kahn said, if we want to prove who's strongest, we really ought to wrestle, because that proves strength more than boxing. The guy said fine, I'll kill you either way. Mr. Kahn was an athlete who had a great deal of experience wrestling, and he soon had the man on the ground with his boot on his neck. He said, "Am I still a damn Yankee Jew?" The guy said, no, not any more you're not.
Here's the article, from the Huffington Post.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-karras/dday-veterans-brother-was_b_5440492.html
D-Day Veteran's Brother Was Holocaust's First Jewish
Victim
Lothar Kahn, D-Day Plus 70 Years
Seventy years ago, on June 6, T/3
Kahn approached the Normandy coast in an LCM filled with 28 seasick army
engineers from the 146th Engineer Combat Battalion and sailors from a Naval
Combat Demolition Unit. Orders were to land at low tide on "easy green"
and destroy all obstacles -- Belgian Gates, posts capped with Teller mines, and
rows of steel hedgehogs -- and create gaps for the infantry.
Gap Assault Team from the 146th ECB prior to the invasion
"[The 146th] landed in the first wave with floating tanks
from the 741st and 743rd Tank Battalions, literally, in the first minutes of
the invasion," said Joseph Balkoski, author of Omaha Beach: D-Day, June 6, 1944.
After weeks of rehearsals in
Devon, the army's V Corps selected the Kahn's outfit to lead the initial
assault on D-Day.
Some may even call it poetic
justice, but Kahn's Gap Assault Team No. 7 could not effectively perform their
tasks.
"The engineers knew very well
that they would have 30-40 minutes to blow the obstacles because the tide was
rising."
The settling smoke and dust from
the massive Allied bombardment, which ended minutes earlier, afforded a clear
view of Omaha Beach, but not the catastrophe that awaited them.
"The minute we jumped out of
the boats the shooting started," Kahn told us. "Two or three German
machine guns, overlapping, and raking the beach. All you heard was, 'Get off
the beach, you're gonna be dead ducks' and then I was on my own."
The 19-year-old combat engineer
lumbered under the weight of a rifle, helmet, a Hagensen pack crammed with wire
cutters, gas mask, cartridges, an inflatable life belt, a canteen, drenched
fatigues, and 50 pounds of C2 plastic explosives, with hooks and rope. He
miraculously made it in one piece, beside a cluster of drenched and petrified
Americans.
"I got against a cliff with six, eight people and there
were guys lying around. I said to someone, 'Boy these guys must be tired' ...
'Tired? These are dead people.' When I heard that, I jumped up and the guy pulled me down and yelled, 'Don't jump up you'll get shot.' I had never seen a dead person before and they were all around me."
Gemünden am Main, Germany
'Tired? These are dead people.' When I heard that, I jumped up and the guy pulled me down and yelled, 'Don't jump up you'll get shot.' I had never seen a dead person before and they were all around me."
Gemünden am Main, Germany
Kahn's path to D-Day was an odyssey in itself, which began in the lower Franconia region of Germany in a small town called Gemünden. The youngest son of Levi and Martha Kahn's four children, Kahn was expelled from public school the year he turned nine.
"The Jewish boys and girls
were put in the last row, the teachers didn't ask us anything, and then they
kicked us out of school altogether." Kahn told us. "I had to get up
at 5 a.m. to catch an hour-long cattle train to a Jewish school in Thüngen,
when it was dark and cold in winter time."
Like most Jewish youngsters who
once imagined intellectual and professional careers at the time, Kahn instead
traded his books for practical vocational training -- first becoming a
locksmith and then a machinist.
The extermination of European Jews
may have been formally outlined at the Wannsee Conference in 1942, but the
Holocaust was immediate for the Kahn family when the eldest son, Arthur, was
murdered in Dachau 10 weeks after Hitler became chancellor.
Arthur Kahn, and his gravestone
"Apparently [Arthur Kahn] was involved in anti-Nazi movements at the University at Wurzburg -- which was very typical of Jewish students at the time," said Timothy Ryback, author of Hitler's First Victims.
"The astonishing story is that he was planning on going into medicine -- cancer research -- had been studying abroad at Edinburgh University, and while back at Wurzburg getting his student records, was spotted by some brown-shirted SA, was snatched and put into a detention center. During Easter week, 1933, Arthur Kahn and three others, Ernst Goldmann, Rudolf Benario and Erwin Kahn arrived at Dachau. They were identified as Jews on arrival and beaten terribly. Five minutes after five o'clock on the afternoon of Wednesday, April 12, these young men were given shovels, marched out into the woods, and just gunned down. Arthur was the first one shot. These were the first four victims of the Holocaust. Their deaths involved intentionality, chain of command, selection, and execution, which are the constituent components for these processes we call genocide, and ultimately related to the Jewish population, the Holocaust."
Levi Kahn had to pay money to get
his son's body out of Dachau for a proper Jewish burial. Even worse, Arthur's
mother insisted that his sister, Fanni, an Au pair in England, return to
Germany immediately. She eventually married and was later killed with her
7-year-old son in Minsk.
Thanks to relatives in the U.S., the family managed to obtain visas and emigrate to New York, minus two children, four weeks before the war broke out. Kahn immediately went to work to support his family and, like his brother Herbert, was drafted into the military in 1943.
Thanks to relatives in the U.S., the family managed to obtain visas and emigrate to New York, minus two children, four weeks before the war broke out. Kahn immediately went to work to support his family and, like his brother Herbert, was drafted into the military in 1943.
Lothar and Herbert Kahn
Just as his Jewishness was sufficient to designate him a pariah in Germany, his vocational training there had everything to do with his eventual M.O.S (Military Occupation Specialty) and assignment to an engineer outfit.
"In England they put us in
control of Assault Training Center in Saunton Sands. All of the divisions
preparing for the invasion came through us. We built obstacles, they blew them
up and we built them again. It was very hard work. During training I was
carrying a full pack of dynamite and collapsed when a captain stood over me and
asked, 'Soldier, do you smoke?' I told him that I did and he said, 'well, you
have a choice. You can keep on smoking and get your ass shot off on the beach
or you can stop smoking and you have a chance of getting off the beach.' That
scared the daylights out of me and I stopped."
After weeks of rehearsals in Devon
the army's V Corps of Engineers selected the Kahn's outfit to lead the initial
assault on D-Day.
The irony of one brother being the first Jew murdered by Nazi
policy, and his baby brother landing at H-Hour in possibly the key
event to bring about Hilter's defeat is nothing short of ironic. Some may even
call it poetic justice, but Kahn's Gap Assault Team No. 7 were unable to
function once they jumped out of the landing crafts and infantry took cover
behind the obstacles they were tasked to destroy. The first 30 minutes of the
invasion amounted to total disaster. Hundreds of bodies of dead combat
engineers, tankers, sailors, and infantryman peppered nearly three miles of
Omaha Beach's tile flat. Wounded men drifting in the rising tide were too weak
to fight the current and drowned in the surf, as German artillery and
small-arms fire mowed down wave after wave of infantry.
"All I could hear was, 'Help me, help me,'" said Kahn. "We couldn't blow anything because behind us were Americans and they'd be killed. The floating tanks were picked off like ducks and the Rangers couldn't get through either. All I could do was try and stay alive until the infantry could eliminate the small-arms fire."
At 90, Kahn, who lives in Lincolnwood, Illinois, still speaks with a slight German accent, but his D-Day account reads like any other American veteran who landed on Omaha Beach at H-Hour. And by 1944, he was every bit the "citizen soldier" -- a term the late Stephen E Ambrose ascribed to Americans he dramatically asserted "wanted to throw baseballs, not grenades, shoot a .22 rifle, not an M-1." However entertaining the prose, the late historian wasn't entirely accurate.
"All I could hear was, 'Help me, help me,'" said Kahn. "We couldn't blow anything because behind us were Americans and they'd be killed. The floating tanks were picked off like ducks and the Rangers couldn't get through either. All I could do was try and stay alive until the infantry could eliminate the small-arms fire."
At 90, Kahn, who lives in Lincolnwood, Illinois, still speaks with a slight German accent, but his D-Day account reads like any other American veteran who landed on Omaha Beach at H-Hour. And by 1944, he was every bit the "citizen soldier" -- a term the late Stephen E Ambrose ascribed to Americans he dramatically asserted "wanted to throw baseballs, not grenades, shoot a .22 rifle, not an M-1." However entertaining the prose, the late historian wasn't entirely accurate.
Questions about revenge naturally
arise when hearing the stories of veterans such as Kahn, who had long suffered
under Nazism before fleeing Germany.
"I knew they killed my brother. That I knew. Revenge, certainly, but I didn't want to get killed either. In those moments, especially on D-Day, it's a matter of preserving life. In fact, a day after the invasion they got me to interview some German prisoners (machine gunners) who told me, 'We killed them and they kept coming, there was nothing we could do.'"
"I knew they killed my brother. That I knew. Revenge, certainly, but I didn't want to get killed either. In those moments, especially on D-Day, it's a matter of preserving life. In fact, a day after the invasion they got me to interview some German prisoners (machine gunners) who told me, 'We killed them and they kept coming, there was nothing we could do.'"
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