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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Story About Truth and Courage in Tough Times!, July 22, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Prison Called Hohenasperg: An American Boy Betrayed by His Government During World War II (Paperback)
Mr. Art Jacobs, the author of "The Prison Called Hohenasperg" writes his story out of love. Love of life, country, friends, and family. Unfortunately, Art, at the age of 12 was separated from these very basic essentials of life. He narrarates this true story detailing his youth in school, boy scouts, and support for his ball club, the Brooklyn Dodgers. However, life will soon change for young Art and his family as his father is illegally taken from them and interned at Ellis Island as a "Nazi criminal". This is just the beginning of the Jacob's family internment journey that takes them from Ellis Island, to the Crystal City Texas Internment Camp, then to Germany where Art spends his 13th birthday in the Hohenasperg prison. I believe that his intention and motive for writing his story is NOT for compensation, revenge, or to denounce the United States. As I read his story, I felt his sincerity, compassion, and most importantly his intention to MAKE THE TRUTH KNOWN. Because of Art's story, The United States Government has an opportunity to acknowlege Art and other internees that wrongdoings to Americans of German decent did occur. I recommend this hard to put down, well documented book to those who are interested in WWII history, post WWII Germany, internment life, as well as those interested in reading a boy's burning desire to overcome and succeed under any circumstance to come back to his "Country 'tis of thee".
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Only one week?, October 2, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: The Prison Called Hohenasperg: An American Boy Betrayed by His Government During World War II (Paperback)
... A young boy marched back and forth before the hangman's tree with his hands above his head, ordered not the speak, turn his head the wrong way, or even sit to eat - unless he wanted to be hanged - treated like the worst criminals the world has known - and called a little Nazi - He was an American Boy Scout! One day of such treatment, even if corrected immediately, is inexcuseable. We must stop thinking that the United States make mistakes, but the rest of the world makes criminal acts. I believe this book should be an eye-opener. We need to be concerned that our government can give such power to one man such as Edward J. Ennis, that our military could treat even criminals the way this child was treated, and that most Americans still know nothing about the treatment of German Americans during World War II.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Yes, Germans were interned, too, September 2, 1999
This review is from: The Prison Called Hohenasperg: An American Boy Betrayed by His Government During World War II (Paperback)
The eyes of the child on the cover tell the sad story of disillusionment, sadness and confusion. Bad enough that the members of this German-American family were interned, but to be treated the way they ultimately were is abominable. It actually defies belief, but surely it is true. Every American civics course should offer this book as proof of what can happen during wartime hysteria and how our government must guard against such antics. The book also stands as clear proof, as if enough didn't already exist, that not only Japanese were interned during WWII by the US, but Germans were, too. It remains a mystery why the government has yet to acknowledge this fact in any meaningful way. Beyond telling the overall internment story, this book is a fascinating eyewitness recital of life as it was for immigrants in Brooklyn, internees at Ellis Island and Crystal City (and the desperate families internees left behind) and for Germans living under the Allied occupation after the war. While military histories abound, it is unusual to find an account of life as it was for the "little guy" in Germany after the war, particularly in English. This book is most valuable for putting a human face on the trials of Germans in the US during the war and of German families after the war...and is definitely a good read.
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