Jarring memories
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Andrew Glazer
FAIRGROUNDS -- The swastikas and Iron Crosses displayed in neat
rows are jarring, especially next to doll collections and Elvis
memorabilia.
Nearly everyone visiting the Collections Corner at the Orange County
Fair stop and stare at the glass case holding the boldly designed Nazi
symbols of one of the world’s most notorious regimes.
For Eugene Rasmussen, 75, owner of the collection, the medals
represent painful but complex memories of his time at sea in World War
II.
“In a lot of ways, the German soldiers were like us,” said Rasmussen,
who has the same square shoulders and strong jaw he had when went to war
55 years ago. “They were very young. They weren’t all Nazis. Many, like
us, didn’t want to fight. But if they didn’t, they knew what the Gestapo
would do. They were petrified.”
Rasmussen came face-to-face with his German counterparts several times
during the later stages of the war.
For months, Rasmussen was aboard one of two ships holding roughly 800
U.S. Army soldiers charged with blockading the English Channel from
German U-boats. He was 19 years old.
On Christmas Eve, 1944, the Germans torpedoed the other ship. As
British warships rushed to the aid of the sinking ship, soldiers began to
jump into the choppy 47-degree water. Many drowned. Others froze. Some
attempting to reach the rescue vessels were crushed between the ships.
“There was nothing you could do,” said Rasmussen, who said it took
decades before he could celebrate on Christmas Eve. “We just stood on the
deck of the ship for 14 hours.”
Five months later, 50,000 Germans sailing U-boats in the English
Channel surrendered. They looked as young, confused, frightened and
relieved the war was over as Rasmussen’s American comrades. Many
willingly handed over their hats and medals.
“They were happy to get rid of them,” Rasmussen said. “It meant they
were free to come to the surface and go back home.”
As he sat carving an American eagle into a swatch of leather in the
fair’s Home and Hobbies Building on Wednesday, Rasmussen said he doesn’t
often talk about his World War II experiences.
“You live with it,” he said. “Unless you meet other people who were
there, there’s not much use in talking about it much. Not many people
understand what it was like.”
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