War Escapes
Two books and two films about harrowing escapes during World War 2. One story is about Jan Baalsrud, a British-trained Norwegian commando, who escapes over snowy mountains (with the help of Norwegian resistance) from German-Occupied Norway to Sweden.
The other story is ghostwritten about Polish prisoner-of-war Slavomir Rawitz and 8 companions, who escape from Stalin's Soviet Gulag to India. Snow and mountains. deserts and death.
Jan Baalsrud, Norway to Sweden, 29 March to 1 June 1943
We Die Alone (book)
by David Howarth, 1955 and 1999 / Beaverton lib 940.5472 HOW
Operation Martin, leader Løytnant Sigurd Eskeland
ship MK Bratholm
- p62 15 Norwegians tortured and murdered by Germans, collaborating shopkeeper and official sentenced after war to 8 and 14 years of hard labor
Table on page 204 , many names do not translate
March 31 |
|
April 3 |
Bjorneskar?? Mapcarta.com shows southern Norway |
April 5 |
Knosen ?? by boat |
April 5 |
Lynseidet ?? |
April 5 to 8 |
Lost in Lyngen Alps |
April 8 |
Marius's farm in Furuflaten |
April 12 |
Across Lyngen fjord |
April 12 to 25 |
hut at Revdal |
April 25 |
Ascent of Revdal |
April 25 to May 12 |
in snow cave |
May 1 |
Marius and Agnethe climb the plateau |
May 2 |
Mandal men arrive, first attempt on frontier |
May 9 |
Second attempt on frontier |
May 22 |
Carried down to cave in Mandal |
May 26 |
Carried up to plateau again |
June 1 |
Crossed the Swedish border |
The 12th Man (2018 Norwegian Harald Zwart film)
Beaverton lib DVD 12th
More Later
Slavomir Rawicz, USSR to Mongolia, Gobi Desert, China, Tibet, and India
The Long Walk (book)
The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
Slavomir Rawitz (London ghostwriter Ronald Downing) 1956 and 2006 / West Slope lib 940.5472 Rawicz
001-011 interrogation and hot-tar-on-hand torture in Lubyanka prison
- 012 Trial
016 asked about wife Vera, married 5 July 1939 in Pinsk, brief visits, not involved in trial (like the movie)
- 022 sentenced to 25 years forced labor, then properly fed and bathed, transported mid-November 1940
- 038 called up in 1937 while studying architecture and surveying in Warsaw, cavalry trained, back to graduate in 1938
- 039 then 2nd lieutenant, then home, then mobilized 1 March 1939
- 040 September 15?, last cavalry charge in modern warfare
043 back to "present", train stops 8 miles past Krasnoyarsk
045 3 days in cold, then fufaika padded jackets, then 60 wood-burning army trucks
- 046 5000 prisoners 100 trudging men chained behind a truck, avoiding towns
058 40 days march, blizzard last week of January 1941, Ostyak reindeer herdsmen
064 15 miles per day p065 Camp 303, north side of Lena River, 200 to 300 miles southwest of Yakutsk
- 069 commandant Colonel Ushakov: First build barracks
- 070 Politruk Colonel arrogant and insulting. "When is spring?" "Don't ask stupid questions"
- 072 fortnight later, two lines of ten huts finished
- 075 Bread and korizhki tobacco (made from leaf veins) were camp currency
- 078 ski making volunteers, extra bread, eventually 160 pairs of skis per day
- 081 volunteers to fix Commissar's radio, wife Ushakova friendly, later suggests escape
- 086 Anastazi Kolemenos, 27 yo Latvian
- 089 Sigmund Makowski, 37 yo Polish captain
- 093 Anton Paluchowitz, 41 yo Polish sergeant
- 094 Eugene Zaro, 30 yo Yugoslav clerk
- 095 Zacharius Marchinlovas, 28yo Lithuanian architect
- 096 Mister Smith, American engineer (7 total)
- 100 April, all in the same hut
- 101 Ushakova gifts axehead, 102 travel bags, sheepskin jacket
- gubka moss for tinder
- 103 leave camp at midnight, early April 105 inner wire, fence, 12 foot palisade fence p109 snow cave
- 110 5 night marches, holed up daytime
- 111 9th day Lena River 113 break through ice, small fish fountain up 114 thirty miles, 10 hours per day
- 117 kill stag deer, stay a day and eat
- 121 middle of May, first signs of spring 122 reach Lake Baikal
The Way Back (2010 English Peter Weir film)
A film is not a book, they adapt stories to different audiences (and must achieve different financial outcomes). That said, the film wonderfully captures the spirit and struggles that Slawomir Rawicz (and his English-adept ghost writer) described in his very moving book "The Long Walk".
The struggles and bravery of the female character were moving in both film and book. Her written story actually made me cry, and the film would have had I not already explored my feelings reading the book. See the film, read the book, enjoy both as masterpieces.
Another (perhaps neurotic) emigre claims the book was made up or plagiarized, and by implication the story of this film. That slander was thoroughly debunked by a New York Times investigative reporter, but slanders endure long past their rebuttal. Communism-as-slander (as opposed to voluntary, generous, collaborative economic production) endures today.
Memory is a trickster, and months of starvation followed by decades of verbal re-tellings will change any story. So, a real story actually happened, a misremembered story was written many years after the event, and a somewhat different story was filmed 65 years after the event. I am horrified that millions endured such stories in the gulag, but glad that the stories in the book and the film were both told so movingly.
I rate this 9 stars to acknowledge that there are many reasons other viewers would dislike it, and subtract only one because I care more about Rawicz and his companions and the book story and this movie story than I care about the unhappy viewers. :-P
I care most about the MILLIONS who suffered in the gulag (a friend spent his first 14 years there), and those suffering in modern equivalents.
Lastly, an ending "spoiler". In the film, the protagonists reach India, and are welcomed by a throng (in the book, a small British army patrol). Two of the protagonists are questioned and reply in English.
In the book, only the American "Smith" knows English, though the others know Russian and Polish and Ukrainian and German and French among them. The book continues with a hospital stay, followed by training for combat in the Polish legion of the British Army near the end of World War 2. The real-life protagonists arrived as walking skeletons, and needed months (and a few weeks comatose) to recover.
The hospital recovery ending makes for a better book, but a lousy film.