The News of the Week in Review
The Great Drama in Headlines: The Beginning and the Climactic Week (graphic) 11
Fifteen News Questions 12
The Pulse of the War: A Chart Showing the Fluctuations of Allied Hopes for Victory 13
As the Focus of the War Shifted to the Pacific (map) 14
Army Shift to Pacific Next Big War Problem (Baldwin) 15-16
The Next Big Link-Up (cartoon) 16
Answers to Fifteen News Questions 16
One to Go (cartoon) 17
The New York Times Book Review 18
The Best Selling Books Here and Elsewhere
Among the New Mystery Novels (Reviews by Isaac Anderson)
http://www.etherit.co.uk/month/4/06.htm
May 6th, 1945 (SUNDAY)
GERMANY: Dönitz sacks Himmler from all offices.
NORWAY:
The Hopseidet Incident.
[Story Continued from the 5th]
On the 6th, between two and three o’clock, the Germans went ashore, and fire was opened from the defenders. After some heavy fire from machineguns the defenders were forced to retire. Only one man stayed behind on the beach; the “Bergen-man” Henry Mohr was hiding behind some big rocks while he was responding the fire with his light arms. When he finally ran out of ammo, he stretched his arms up and surrendered. He was badly mistreated by the Germans, but for some reason not shot. Together with the “guide” Ivar ÿye was taken aboard the sub.
Another fisherman was also wounded by the Germans. Mathis Persen had been hit in the knee early in the fight. He was laying in agony on a small grass-field close to the beach. A German soldier approached him, looked at his knee, shook his head and pointed his gun against his head. Persen begged for his life, the German put away his gun and put a bandage to Persens knee. Twice he went back with his gun lifted, but finally left the wounded man.
The Germans concentrated their energy elsewhere; all livestock they could find was gathered and shot. All the buildings who was in such a state that people could take shelter or live in, were blown up (It is necessary to remember that all houses were burned as the Germans redrew from the county in autumn 1944, and these houses were just improvised structures).
Sigurd Ferman was one of the witnesses to what happened. The Germans were leading six fishermen, who were taken prisoner as they were trying to make it for the mountains, towards the only building left in the village, a warehouse. The fishermen were lined up with their hands above their heads, and three Germans lined themselves up against them with their weapons ready. Just before the weapons were fired, the witness Ferman could hear one of the fishermen shout:” Are you firing at civilians.?” Ferman was stunned as he watched the six fishermen being executed. The victims were screaming. An officer then gave them coup de grace with his bayonet.
Two of the soldiers went inside and searched the building. It later showed that two of the fishermen had knives placed in their hands to make it look as they had been armed. Ferman identified the knives and knew that they were taken from the warehouse.
In the cellar of a cowshed Caroline Mikalsen were hiding with nine of her eleven children, the youngest only 4 months old. One daughter was away, and her husband and the eldest son were among the executed fishermen. The Germans become aware of the hideaways, and one soldier went inside the cowshed and fired his weapon through the roof, above which some of the children was hiding and nearly hit by the bullets. The eldest daughters were hiding inside a cupboard.
Caroline asked for mercy, but the soldier said triumphant that her husband and son were shot, and then he raped her with the children watching. As he left the cowshed, he threw a hand grenade in through a window. It landed in a basket of clothes and did not explode. One of her sons later carried the basket down to the sea.
After this the Germans went back to the beach. The loudspeakers on the subs played march-music, and a voice declared that Hopseidet was taken without German casualties, and that six enemies were fallen. The soldiers embarked the subs, and accompanied by loud music they left and were soon out of sight.
To the six bodies by the warehouse were attached propaganda-posters. The wounded man Mathis Persen was still laying down by the shore. Caroline Mikalsen heard his call for help and found him by rowing slowly along the shore. Her 14-year old son and herself carried the wounded, now unconscious man into shelter. Her nursing saved Persens life until the doctor arrived.
At 5 o’clock the following day Norwegian troops arrived at Hopseidet only to find that six innocent civilians lives were lost. Half an hour later the Germans in Norway surrenders, Hopseidet became the last German military action in Norway.
Later two German soldiers were put to trial in West-Germany, accused of the misdeed, but the case was dismissed in 1969. The soldiers claimed self- defence, and a Norwegian trial was never stated.
On the scene of the misdeed a memorial has been placed, bearing the following inscription:
“In memory of six civilian unarmed fishermen, mishandled and shot by the Germans the 6. May 1945.
Leonard Eriksen 35 years
Einar Mikalsen 47 years
Johan Mikalsen 18 years
Harald Kristiansen 39 years
Henry Kristiansen 16 years
Reidar Karlsen 17 years
The German U-Boats involved were the “U-318” and the “U-992”, which landed a platoon of Kleinkampfverbände 35 under command of Korvettenkapitän Wolfgang Woerdermann at Hopseidet, near Gamvik in Finnmark county, 6th May, 1945. They executed six unarmed Norwegian civilians as well as committing other crimes. Both U-boat captains were tried after the War, but were found not guilty as the crimes committed were not committed by the U-boat crews. (Torstein Saksvik)
CZECHOSLOVAKIA: Pilsen is liberated by the US 3rd Army, but is ordered to stay there to allow the Russians to occupy the rest of the country.
Prague: The 1st Division of the POA join the fight with the Czech patriots against the remaining German SS units. By the evening the city is clear of SS.
Lisbon: PORTUGAL severs diplomatic relations with Germany.
BURMA: The British 26th Indian Division mops up in the area north of Rangoon.
INDIAN OCEAN: The battleships and cruisers of TF 63 shell Port Blair in the Andaman Islands.
RN 804 Sqn Hellcat a/c #JX803 ditched port side of ship during Operation “BISHOP” strikes on the Nicobar and Andaman Islands off Port Blair in the Indian Ocean. Pilot lost.
SINGAPORE: U-181 and U-862 taken over by Japan and became the Japanese submarine I 502 15 July 1945.
NETHERLANDS EAST INDIES:
U-195 is taken over by the Japanese at Soerebaja.
U-219 is taken over by the Japanese at Batavia.
OKINAWA: The Japanese counteroffensive fizzles out with heavy losses. This confirms US gains at Maeda Ridge and Marchinto Air Field.
Off Okinawa, kamikazes damage the surveying ship USS Pathfinder (AGS-1) and the seaplane tender USS St. George (AV-16).
PACIFIC OCEAN: Naval landing force evacuates 500 Marshallese from Jaluit Atoll, Marshall Islands.
U.S.A.: Heavy cruiser USS Toledo launched.
ATLANTIC OCEAN: Destroyer escort USS Atherton, while en route from New York to Boston, encountered a U-boat. After four depth charge attacks, pieces of broken wood, cork, mattresses, and an oil slick broke the surface. Atherton, in conjunction with frigate USS Moberly, was later credited with destroying U-853.
U-881 sunk in the North Atlantic SE of Newfoundland, in position 43.18N, 47.44W, by depth charges from destroyer escort USS Farquhar. 53 dead (all hands lost).
U-1008 sunk in the Kattegat north of Hjelm Island, in position 56.14N, 10.51E, by depth charges from an RAF 86 Sqn Liberator. 44 survivors (No casualties)
U-3523 sunk at 1839hrs in the Skaggerak east of Århus, Denmark, in position 57.52N, 10.49E, by depth charges from an RAF 86 Sqn Liberator. 58 dead (all hands lost).