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The Prison Called Hohenasperg

An American boy betrayed by his Government during World War II

Arthur D. Jacobs

ISBN 1-58112-832-0

Paperback: 162 pages

$ 19,95

Unknown to most Americans, more than 10,000 Germans and German Americans were interned in the United States during the Second World War. This story is about the internment of a young American and his family. He was born in the United States and the story tells of his perilous path from his home in Brooklyn to internment at Ellis Island, N.Y. and Crystal City, Texas, and imprisonment, after the war, at a place in Germany called Hohenasperg. When he arrived in Germany in the dead of winter, he was transported to Hohenasperg in a frigid, stench-filled, locked, and heavily guarded, boxcar. Once in Hohenasperg, he was separated from his family and put in a prison cell. He was only twelve years old! He was treated like a Nazi by the U.S. Army guards and was told that if he didn't behave he would be killed. He tried to tell them he was an American, but they just told him to shut up. His fellow inmates included high-ranking officers of the Third Reich who were being held for interrogation and denazification. The book tells how the author survived this ordeal and many others, and how he fought his way back to his beloved America.

Also available in Dutch


We Were Not The Enemy

The United States clandestinely funds the operation of a huge prison in Cuba. Men, women, and children are spirited away from their homes and imprisoned indefinitely. No charges are made; no legal counsel is allowed. Newspapers fill with stories of espionage and enemies. Current events? No.

During World War II, the United States used tactics remarkably similar to those in use today against presumed terrorists. By 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt had covertly authorized J. Edgar Hoover's Secret Intelligence Service to begin surveillance of Axis nationals in Latin America. Believing that “all German nationals without exception [are] dangerous,” the United States surreptitiously pressured Latin-American countries to arrest and deport more than four thousand civilians of German ethnicity to the United States. There, many languished in internment camps, while others were shipped to war-torn Germany.

As my parents, German-born Werner Gurcke and his American wife, Starr, began their lives together in Costa Rica, he was falsely labeled one of the country's most dangerous enemy aliens. Soon she, too, was considered “dangerous to the ... safety of the United Nations.” From newlyweds to parents, innocent civilians to dangerous enemies, prisoners to internees, We Are Not the Enemy tells their story.

Schocking book written by Heidi Gurcke Donald, former Crystal City, Texas, internee (1943-A4), co-founded the German American Internee Coalition. She writes for and served as an editorial adviser for a report to Congress from the 2005 “Assembly on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians” held in San Francisco.