Logo video2dn
  • Сохранить видео с ютуба
  • Категории
    • Музыка
    • Кино и Анимация
    • Автомобили
    • Животные
    • Спорт
    • Путешествия
    • Игры
    • Люди и Блоги
    • Юмор
    • Развлечения
    • Новости и Политика
    • Howto и Стиль
    • Diy своими руками
    • Образование
    • Наука и Технологии
    • Некоммерческие Организации
  • О сайте

Скачать или смотреть Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'?

  • Untold Captive Stories
  • 2026-01-11
  • 89
Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'?
german pow womenww2 historysweet cornprisoner of warpow campsamerican pow campsgeneva conventionworld war 2untold ww2 storiesgerman prisonersnazi propaganda1944wisconsinhistorical documentarytrue war storiescultural misunderstandingfood historyww2 foodcamp mccoyamerican soldiers ww2pow treatmentcorn crisishistorical educationdocumentary historylong form historydeep dive history45 minute documentarymargarete vogel
  • ok logo

Скачать Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'? бесплатно в качестве 4к (2к / 1080p)

У нас вы можете скачать бесплатно Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'? или посмотреть видео с ютуба в максимальном доступном качестве.

Для скачивания выберите вариант из формы ниже:

  • Информация по загрузке:

Cкачать музыку Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'? бесплатно в формате MP3:

Если иконки загрузки не отобразились, ПОЖАЛУЙСТА, НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если у вас возникли трудности с загрузкой, пожалуйста, свяжитесь с нами по контактам, указанным в нижней части страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса video2dn.com

Описание к видео Why Did German Women Call This American Food 'Pig Food'?

October 1944. A POW camp in Wisconsin. German women prisoners face their first American meal.

Roast beef. Mashed potatoes. White bread with real butter. And then... corn.

Margarete Vogel stares at the yellow kernels on her tray. In Germany, corn isn't food for people. Corn is what you throw in a pig trough. Serving it to a human being is an insult. It says: "You are an animal."

She walks up to the American cook, trembling with fury and fear.

"Schweinefutter!" she shouts. "Pig food! We are not animals!"

She expects to be beaten. She expects to be punished for complaining. That's what happens when you question authority in Nazi Germany.

Instead, the cook does something that shatters everything she's been taught about Americans.

He picks up a spoon, eats the corn himself, and then removes it from her plate. No punishment. No lecture. Just: "No problem."

This is the true story of how sweet corn—a vegetable—did more to defeat Nazi ideology than any bomb ever could.

⚠️ HISTORICAL CONTEXT:
During WWII, approximately 425,000 German POWs were held in over 700 camps across the United States. Under Geneva Convention protocols, they received the same rations as American soldiers—3,300 calories per day.

For prisoners coming from a starving Germany where civilians survived on 900 calories of sawdust bread and turnip soup, this abundance was incomprehensible. Many believed the food was poisoned or a psychological trick.

But the "Corn Crisis" was real. In Germany, maize was field corn—hard, starchy, fed only to livestock. Americans had bred sweet corn—tender, sugary, meant for human consumption. German POWs had no context for this.

When they refused to eat it, American guards didn't punish them. They accommodated the preference. They swapped corn for potatoes. They listened to complaints instead of crushing them.

This simple act of problem-solving did more to de-program Nazi ideology than any formal re-education program. It proved that democracy wasn't weak for listening—it was strong because it could adapt.

💭 DISCUSSION QUESTION:
If you'd been raised under 12 years of Nazi propaganda, would ONE act of American decency have been enough to make you question everything?

📚 SOURCES:
National Archives - POW Camp Records (1944-1946)
"Nazi Prisoners of War in America" - Arnold Krammer (1979)
"Guests Behind the Barbed Wire: German POWs in America" - Judith M. Gansberg
Camp McCoy Historical Documentation (Wisconsin)
Personal testimonies from German female POWs (archived interviews)
US Army Quartermaster Corps - POW Feeding Guidelines (1943-1945)

🎯 HISTORICAL ACCURACY:
This story is based on documented incidents in American POW camps. "Margarete Vogel" is a composite character based on multiple testimonies from German women prisoners. The "corn refusal" incident occurred in multiple camps and became a known issue among US military personnel.

Robert Patterson (the cook) represents composite accounts of American mess personnel who handled these cultural misunderstandings with pragmatic problem-solving.

#germanpows #ww2history #prisonerofwar #untoldhistory #HistoricalDocumentary #sweetcorn #powcamps #1944 #propaganda #culturalmisunderstanding #truestory #historicaleducation #worldwar2

---

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке

Похожие видео

  • О нас
  • Контакты
  • Отказ от ответственности - Disclaimer
  • Условия использования сайта - TOS
  • Политика конфиденциальности

video2dn Copyright © 2023 - 2025

Контакты для правообладателей [email protected]