Tuesday, January 03, 2017
14 days as a P.O.W.
It
was 1944 and the evening air in northern Italy was hot and humid. Warren
Richter had just taken food to American troops in the Venetian Valley. Those
troops were moving east. Richter was speeding back toward a rendezvous with his
unit in an U.S. Army Jeep, but had reversed direction
in the dark.
Then
he came to a junction in the road.
“It
was moonlight and I didn’t realize I was on the wrong road until I entered the
shadows of a long row of trees. Then, I suddenly saw I was in the middle of a
German Panzer division, sitting quietly in the shadows,” Richter recalled.
Richter
recalls sitting and wondering if he should stop and act like he was part of the
German unit or whether he should floor the accelerator and try to out run the
guns with his jeep.
Richter
continued to move slowly until he saw moonlight through the trees. “I had
almost decided to try and out run the Germans when I was stopped,” said
Richter. “They yelled for me to stop and I jerked the jeep to a stop and threw
my hands up toward the sky. There is still a landmark there where I jabbed two
holes in the sky with my fists. I remember looking up at the gun turret on the
tank and there were rifles pointed down at me.”
A
German officer, who Richter later learned was named Dr. Al Pitrock, stepped
from the tank and told Richter he was prisoner. “When he was walking toward me
I said, ‘Do you want to surrender to me?’ What he really wanted to know was what
nationality I was. I told them not to insult me by saying I was British. For
just a few moments the Germans thought I was funny … but actually I was scared
as hell.”
Dr.
Pitrock ordered the German men to frisk Richter and take over his jeep.
That
singular event marked the first of Richter’s 14 days as a prisoner of war. The
experienced forever changed Richter and his perspective on what it means to be
free.
“I
have more of an appreciation of what freedom is, and what it means, than
anyone, said Richter, a longtime resident of Bois D’Arc, Mo. “I have seen both
sides and fourteen days is long enough to be hungry and scared.”
For
14 days, Richter was held prisoner while the retreating German Panzer unit
sought to avoid contact with advancing American troops. But perhaps the most
amazing part of Richter’s World War II story is the part involving his captor,
Dr. Al Pitrock.
During
those 14 days of captivity Pitrock and Richter developed a friendship which
survived beyond the war. It was a friendship based on the realization they were
humans first and soldiers second, and neither of them a soldier by choice.
Richter,
a member of the 361st Regiment of the 91st Infantry
Division, was drafted into the Army and eventually found himself in northern
Africa training for the landing at Normandy.
During
that time (1944), General Mark Clark, commander of the 5th Army,
called for reserves out of Africa. That included Richter’s unit and he was
assigned to kitchen duty with the specific objective of taking chow forward to
the fighting men.
While
in Italy, Richter earned a reputation among the men for his special “Ash Grove
recipe” donuts. After the war, it was his capture and escape that gained him
fame. However, Richter might not have lived to retell the story had the German
officer, Dr. Pitrock, not gone through Richter’s billfold the evening he was
taken prisoner of war.
“That
German officer (Pitrock) saw my picture of David (Richter’s son) and June
(Richter’s wife) and then reached into his own pocket and pulled out his wallet
and showed me pictures of his wife, a native of New York City, and his
daughter.”
Those
family pictures almost immediately formed a bond between Richter and Pitrock,
who spoke fluent English. “We spent most of the day just talking and we quickly
discovered a common bond. Both of us were drafted and neither of us wanted to
fight,” recalled Richter.
The
retreat of Dr. Pitrock’s 26th SS Panzer Division was a miserable
endeavor. Every day the unit hid in the mountains and each evening they moved northward,
leading the Germans into worse conditions. “Even while they were retreating,
the Germans burned villages, killed innocent people, stole food and raped
nearly every woman they came in contact with,” said Richter who packed rifles
and supplies for the Germans as they moved. “The retreating German Panzer
division even blew up bridges behind them but the American’s stayed within two
hours of us.”
Richter
survived the cold mountain weather by sharing half a blanket with another
German solider, wrapping his feet with newspaper before sticking them in his GI
boots and eating stale bread and water. Despite the hardships of his capture
Dr. Pitrock offered Richter hope by taking a personal interest in him. He even
slipped Richter an occasional chocolate bar.
On
his 13th day of captivity, Richter was sitting beside Pitrock
watching an allied task force through binoculars in a valley below. “We were
sitting there together and Pitrock asked me what time the next task force would
go through the valley. I asked him if it was for his own information or for the
German Army and Al replied it was for his own information,” said Richter. “I
told him more would be along soon, probably at dusk.”
“The next night, we made our way down into the
valley. Al had the password and we passed through sentinel after sentinel. At
the crack of dawn we were behind a stone wall. We could hear an American task
force moving in. It was the 10th Mountain Division,” said Richter,
moving up on the edge of his seat with excitement as he repeated his often told
tale of escape.
Then,
as suddenly has Pitrock had taken Richter prisoner 14 days before, Pitrock
released Richter and told him to follow a path down toward the advancing
Americans. Pitrock was saving Richter’s life by helping him escape but
jeopardizing his own life within the German Army.
“The
troops in the trucks passed by me and just stared. They could not imagine what
I was doing standing there in German territory. Finally, 14 MPs came and picked
me up.”
Richter
was taken back to camp and interviewed by Colonel Rudolph Broedlow. “The first
thing I did when I got back was write a letter home to tell my folks I was
fine,” said Richter.
Ironically,
the unit’s mail orderly had been instructed several days before to gather up
Richter’s possessions and send them home. “Thanks to the delay of the mail my
letter got home the same day as the package of my belongings. In fact, my
mother walked into the post office back home and got the mail and there was my
letter. Then the postmaster handed her the telegram telling her I was missing
so she got the latest news first.”
In
the meantime, the Germans, for letting Richter “get away,” arrested Pitrock.
But, within a few days, the Germans released Pitrock, only to have him captured
by the Americans. Thanks to a pleading letter from Richter to the corporal of
the American prison camp, Pitrock was cared for and used in camp to separate
captured troops by nationality. “I told the corporal to take care of Pitrock
because he had taken care of me,” said Richter.
Dodgeball Tournament Benefits Persecuted Church
This is a project my son Matthew has undertaken and I'm sure proud of him. I'm posting it here in order to be able to share it more widely.
EVENT TITLE:
Dodgeball Tournament. This dodgeball tournament is designed to raise awareness
and money to fund family medical packages for families fleeing from religious
persecution and ISIS in Syria.
COST: $25 dollars
per team of 5.
TIME AND DATE:
January 7, 2017, at 2 pm (start)
LOCATION:
Fellowship Center at Ridgecrest Baptist Church. 2210 W. Republic Road, Springfield,
MO
PRE-REGISTRATION:
Sign up for the tournament and pay ahead of time is preferable but people/teams
can show up the day of the event. Teams
can sign up at http://seniorprojectdodgeball.eventbrite.com
DONATIONS:
Clicking on the same link and the “ticket” option provides an option to make a
donation. $35 will fund the purchase of product in the kits as well as
delivery of a family medical kit to refugee camps in Iraq, Sudan, Nigeria and
Syria. The packets are customized to meet specific needs and will include items
like antibiotic creams, infant formula, diapers, feminine hygiene products,
pharmaceuticals and other supplies. All the purchasing of the kits/supplies is
being done through Voice of The Martyrs. VOM is an organization that helps
spread awareness of religious persecution and has a program and network in
place to help Syrian families.
BENEFIT T-SHIRTS:
T-shirts have also been created and are being sold to raise money for this same
project. People can purchase these until Jan. 2 online at http://greekcornerprinting.com/mneytees-fund-raising.
Some will be for sale at the event and additional orders will also be taken
then.
PROJECT BACKGROUND: All students in English IV Honors at Republic High School
have to create a senior project that involves a research paper, a product/event
related to the topic, and then finally a display and presentation for the
public as a capstone. Students research an area of interest to them. Past examples
have seen students create music albums, books, art shows and community projects
for good causes. Matthew has chosen the “persecuted church” as the topic for his
senior research project. He is interviewing missionaries and people who have
faced persecution and is also working with an international group headquartered
in Oklahoma called Voice of the Martyrs (VOM). It is an organization that
supports and ministers to Christians who are being persecuted for their
beliefs. The VOM has a goal of creating awareness of Christian persecution
taking place worldwide.