Cover Image: Hitler’s Boy Soldiers

Hitler’s Boy Soldiers

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

This is a valuable historical work. The author based this nonfiction on her father's diary, which he kept as a Hitler Youth. Excerpts from the journal are translated into English and included in the text. This is a first hand account of life as a boy/young man in Nazi Germany with present day analysis. The author performed further research into the locations, organizations, situations, and individuals described in the diary. Due to the nature of the topic, it can be difficult to read in places. However, this is a disturbing subject. The author presented it well. She also included photos of her father and others from the period.
Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

A real look at the history of one persons involvement in the Hitler Youth Movement and military events. I found this book to be very interesting in that it tells the story of a generation that were born in a place that seems alien to ¨us now . After reading this I was wondering how the Parties in the Ukraine can be doing such things as the hated Nazis did 70 years ago. Will we ever learn? Still this is an interesting and honest look at political manipulation and what it means for us all.

Was this review helpful?

Unimaginable


What a superbly written title in Hitler’s Boy Soldiers: How My Father’s Generation Was Trained to Kill and Sent to Die for Germany by Helene Munson. I just became fan of this author! Whatever this author writes, I read. I haven't read work from this author before, and I more than enjoyed this story. It probably sounds strange that I enjoyed this story of the life that Munson's father, amid the destruction of the boy soldiers, that he was, but it was eye-opening, and I couldn't put it down. I am fan of WWII history, and love to the memoirs of those who were there, and how they survived. Sometimes they didn't survive, but someone did to tell their story. Munson read her father's journa, and discovered some terribly, unimaginable treatments of her father. Once a boy soldier for Nazi Germany. Once of the things that caught my eye when reading this was how the young generation was permanently scarred by brainwashing. It's a very saddening, emotional, and even at times, you have to put it down to take a break, true story. Munson now has a different perspective of her late father, and she was heartened enough to translate his journal and share it with all those who read it. I recommend that everyone reads this title. Hitler’s Boy Soldiers is a definite recommendation by Amy's Bookshelf Reviews. I look forward to reading more titles by this author. I read this book to give my unbiased and honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Thanks NetGalley for the opportunity to read this early addition.

This is an account of WWII and Nazi history spoken by the daughter of a soldier and his personal diary. A great non-fiction read for those who adore non-fiction.

Was this review helpful?

Hitler's Boy Soldiers
by Helene Munson
Pub Date: May 24, 2022
Experiment
Thanks to Helene Munson, Experiment, and NetGalley for the ARC of this book.
The true, untold story of how Germany’s children fought in WWII, through the lens of the author’s father and his rediscovered journal

When Helene Munson finally reads her father, Hans Dunker’s, wartime journal, she discovers secrets he kept buried for seven decades. This is no ordinary historical document but a personal account of devastating trauma.

During World War II, the Nazis trained some three hundred thousand German children to fight—and die—for Hitler. Hans was just one of those boy soldiers. Sent to an elite school for the gifted at nine years old, he found himself in the grip of a system that substituted dummy grenades for Frisbees. By age seventeen, Hans had shot down Allied pilots with antiaircraft artillery. In the desperate, final stage of Hitler’s war, he was sent on a suicide mission to Závada on the Sudetenland front, where he witnessed the death of his schoolmates—and where Helene begins to retrace her father’s footsteps after his death.
I am recommending this incredible book! 5 stars

Was this review helpful?

Hitler’s Boy Soldiers is a hunting memoir of Hans Dunker’s experience of being a Nazi soldier during his teen years. After Han’s death, his daughter, Helene, discovers his wartime journal. The journal contains painful, horrible truths about how boys were brainwashed while attending Third Reich schools.. The parents are told that the school is for gifted boys and that it is a wonderful opportunity for their sons. While attending the school, the boys are trained to be soldiers. By the time the war was over, Hans had shot down allied soldiers and was sent on a suicide mission. He was only seventeen years old.
Helene Munson does an excellent job of combining the information contained in her father’s journal along with what she also discovers while retracing his footsteps. This haunting memoir is an excellent account of what happened to all of those boys who became a part of the Hitler’s Boy Soldiers.

Was this review helpful?

Helene Munson's Hitler's Boy Soldiers is a deeply moving story of a little studied portion of World War II. Cobbling together the life of her father as a child in the German army, Munson takes the reader through his journey while doing some soul searching herself. The result is a book that, while very small in scope, tackles some much bigger questions about responsibility, generational guilt, and mental health.

Munson's book is on the shorter side and does not give an in depth look at the greater events of World War II. However, it does not suffer for it as the story she tells is focused more on family and understanding than anything else.

(This book was provided by Netgalley and The Experiment. The full review will be posted 26 April 2022 on HistoryNerdsUnited.com.)

Was this review helpful?

There are many books dealing with the youth that grew up under heavy indoctrination in Nazi Germany, but the this is the first book in English I find from the perspective of a "Kriegsenkel," one of the "grandchildren of war" that live haunted by the legacy of the childhood trauma suffered by their "Kriegskinder" ("children of war") parents, and comes to fill a gap in WWII history that's not that well-studied in the Anglophone sphere, although there are already some books of this kind in German.

Hitler's child soldiers were boys (and many girls) that were forced to fight in the war either as Flak (anti-aircraft) helpers or as regular soldiers in SS and Wehrmacht units when aged ranging from 12 to 17, hardly old enough to finish school but cynically used by the Nazi hierarchy as cannon fodder. Because you can't call these children anything but that in view of how callously they were groomed to defend the Nazi ideology & regime in the Hitler Youth groups and elite schools, where they often were subjected to insidious brainwashing without the knowledge or consent of their parents. The author's father, Hans, is used as the poster child of this indoctrination process, describing through his diary entries, pictures, eyewitness accounts of other child soldiers that crossed his path, and primary and secondary sources the author consulted, thoroughly chronicling his life story from a sweet child growing up in South America to his being dropped off in Germany by his trusting parents to get an education that would turn him into a soldier.

The process is subtler than you'd think. To us, with our knowledge and hindsight, it looks so obvious what the Nazis were doing. Their techniques and methods look so easy to spot and refute. But that's the distance of time and history. Back then, for the generation born in the pre-war years, it wasn't that obvious. These children didn't know any better. Two passages in particular struck me because they underline how innocent those kids were: Helene Munson says that when he arrived in Germany at age 9, her father didn't know people used to greet each other with "Good morning" before because all he heard was the "Heil Hilter!" salute; and the testimony of former very young Hitler Youth members that they didn't know what the songs they sang so merrily meant. How is that even possible? Because the Nazis had aptitude for control of the masses, and quickly saw that the way was progressive: start with the songs with more innocent lyrics first, then increase the belligerence, ultra-nationalism, racial hate, etc., progressively as the child ages.

The poor children were ripe for the plucking, and plucked they were, by the thousands and thousands. By the end, Germany had the unenviable record of having mobilised the largest-ever number of child soldiers: 200,000 to 300,000 young boys and girls. It's a shocking amount; no army ever since has mobilised that many children to fight and die senselessly in war.

Such tragic experience that early in life comes at a price: trauma. Helene Munson tells about the trauma her father carried on his shoulders for the rest of his life, trauma that affected her and her siblings. She describes in detail how, and in what ways, her father's untreated PTSD as well as her mother's horrible experiences in the war permeated everything in her life. I appreciate her willingness to ask the tough questions, and to admit to discomfort with certain realities of life at the time, her willingness to look inward, and the ability to call out those who aided and abetted the sweeping under the rug of this topic of child war victims of Nazism, those that preferred silence to providing an outlet, to the cover-up of the lasting trauma of the children that underwent Napola, Adolf Hitler schools, Feldafing elite boarding school, Hitler Youth, BDM, etc., in preparation to take over as soldiers for a brutal regime. At one point, Munson says that, although Germany has been willing to face the atrocities it committed during the war, it's been very unwilling to address the fact that it misused and warped the mind of its own children for nefarious ends. This book, hopefully, will help bring it to the public square for discussion and debate.

Was this review helpful?