Elisabeth vincken biography of barack

  • Fritz vincken truce in the forest
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  • 12-year-old Fritz Vincken and his mother, Elisabeth, listened to warplanes and artillery shells as the Battle of the Bulge neared its climax.
  • A Christmas miracle during the Battle of the Bulge

    By William Haupt III
    The Center Square

    “For a day, the God of goodwill was once more mästare of this corner of the earth when He united opposing men of different honors to share brotherly love in His name." – Jean-Paul Sartre

    In many sectors along the Western Front during World War inom, troops spontaneously stopped fighting at Christmas and enjoyed a brief but welcome respite from the horrors of war. Such moments of humanity were largely lacking from World War II. But one notable exception occurred during the Battle of the Bulge, when sju young soldiers were spared from the fighting on Christmas Eve.

    During World War II, due to the love and courage of a mother, a miracle took place on Christmas Eve in the Ardennes forest during the Battle of the Bulge. Elisabeth Vincken from the German city of Aachen was forced to seek a new home when her house and bakery were destroyed bygd an Allied bombing raid. They fled to a small hun

    Christmas at war: A cabin in the Hurtgen Forest

    An artist’s impression from The Illustrated London News of Jan.9, 1915, “British and German Soldiers Arm-in-Arm Exchanging Headgear: A Christmas Truce between Opposing Trenches.” [Wikimedia]

    It was Christmas Eve 1914. The Tommies of Britain’s Queen’s Westminster Regiment had returned to the frigid trenches the previous day, relieving regular troops after four days of rest.

    Suddenly, in the stillness and cold, the voice of a young farmer’s son, Edgar Aplin, rose up from the frozen earth with “Tommy, Lad!,” a popular song written in 1907 by American lyricist Edward Teschemacher and composer E.J. Margetson:

    Tommy, lad! Tommy, lad!

    Though you’re scarce a wee year old;

    Yet you’re long and you’re strong,

    And your head’s a mass of gold;

    And you’ve got a mighty will of your own,

    You’ve got a kind of way,

    That will carry you along, I know;

    When you face the world one day,

    Tommy lad!

    A few hundred

    A Christmas miracle in the Ardennes

    Members of the 101st Airborne Division singing Christmas Carols in besieged Bastogne at midnight on Christmas Eve (Photo: NARA)

    You have probably heard about the famous Christmas Truce of 1914 in World War I. In many sectors along the Western Front, troops spontaneously stopped fighting at Christmas and enjoyed a brief but welcome respite from the horrors of war. Such moments of humanity were largely lacking from World War II, but one notable exception occurred during the Battle of the Bulge, when seven young soldiers were spared from the fighting for Christmas Eve – all because of the love and courage of a mother.
     
    That mother was Elisabeth Vincken, from the German city of Aachen near the German-Belgian border. The Vincken family's home and bakery was destroyed by an Allied bombing raid in April 1944, forcing them to seek a new home. Elisabeth's husband knew of a small cottage in the

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