In his graphic account of the fighting, Fritz recalls events such as
recovering the body of a fallen colleague from No Man's Land, the
terrifying experience of facing a Red Army infantry attack, Soviet tank
assaults, comrades in a neighboring crater being hit by a shell and the
moment when he was terribly wounded in the leg.
On 22 June 1941, German forces launched Operation Barbarossa - Hitler's
invasion of the Soviet Union. Instead of the swift knockout blow that
the Germans had anticipated, the war against the Soviets ground on
relentlessly for almost four years. It was into this bloody theater of
war that Fritz Sauer was sent.
Having initially joined the ranks of the Reichsarbeitsdienst, the Reich
Labour Service, Fritz was posted to Infantry Regiment No. 437 in April
1942. Part of the 132nd Infantry Division, the regiment was serving on
the Eastern Front having been deployed to the Crimea. The regiment was
then transferred to the region around Leningrad, where, for the first
time, Fritz truly experienced the horrors of war.
As well as his best friend being killed by a sniper, Fritz recalled
events such as recovering the body of a fallen colleague from No Man's
Land, the terrifying experience of facing a Red Army infantry attack,
Soviet tank assaults, and the moment when a group of comrades in a
neighboring crater were hit by a shell. He became a casualty himself
when he was badly wounded in the legs during a counterattack.
After his recovery and retraining in a convalescent unit, Fritz was
detailed to serve as a guard in a prisoner of war camp - still on the
Eastern Front. Transferred to a tank assault regiment during the last
year of the war, he was ordered to make contact with another unit, but
lost his way in the snow. After sheltering with a farmer's family, Fritz
decided to head west, fleeing before the advancing Red Army. His
subsequent journey home took many twists and turns.
Based on Fritz's own recollections and narrative, this account of a
young soldier's experiences in the Second World War was brought together
by his son. It is a moving and graphic description of one man's
involvement in the largest military confrontation in history - the Hell
that was the Eastern Front.