Copyright oggbashan November 2022
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
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It was just after midnight on Christmas Eve 1914. I was sitting in the cold damp trench only fifty yards from the Germans in their front line equally cold and miserable.
We were relieved that there had been no firing for the last three hours.
We heard the Germans begin quietly singing the carol Stille Nacht, Heilege Nacht. We joined in with the English Version Silent Night, Holy Night. Gradually both sides singing became louder and some instruments joined in, a couple of mouth organs in the English trenches and a guitar from the Germans.
After that, but with some unspoken agreement, the Germans would sing another carol, would stop and we would sing a carol in English.
We sang for hours until the grey foggy dawn gradually lightened. We could see the Germans standing just in front of their trenches in No Man's Land. A few English troops also climbed out of their trenches. Slowly, gradually, not quite believing it, we approached each other. Two hours after dawn the two forces were mixed, exchanging presents from what little we had -- cigarettes, chocolate, and comparing family photographs.
I was calling the German beside me 'Fritz'; he was calling me 'Tommy' until we found out he was a Bavarian called Hans, and I was a Hampshire man called John.
Later we heard that in some other places on the Western Front troops had played football against each other. We just stood around and talked as fellow human beings who didn't want to be at war.
Hans and I laughed about the promises made at the start of the war that it would be over by Christmas. Here we were on Christmas Day and as far as we as ordinary soldiers could see, the war wasn't going to end in days, or even weeks or months. We were angry with the governments and military commanders who had committed hundreds of thousands of men to fight, and fight and for what?
Locally the unofficial truce lasted three days until our angry officers ordered us, on both sides, back into our trenches and the shelling started again. Whose guns fired first? I didn't care. We were back in the deadly game of kill or be killed.
Over the next week I thought often of Hans and how similar we were. Hans, like me, was engaged. We had shown each other pictures of our fiancées. Hans was worried that his fiancée might be getting tired of a long distance relationship.
The reason that Hans and I had got on so well is that his English was competent, as was my German. We had been able, even if they were in a foreign language, to see the nuances in the letters from our fiancées. Hans was worried that his fiancée.could choose another while he was in the trenches. I had similar worries about mine. Although both of us wrote letters to our fiancées frequently, their letters to us had been less demonstrative and more formal over the last month.
Three weeks later, the British officers were still concerned about the effect of the Christmas truce on our fighting ability. They had ordered a succession of aggressive night patrols and raids.
On the day I was detailed to be part of a night patrol of a dozen men to cut the German wire for another patrol to attack the German trenches. There had been a very heavy bombardment of shells all day long. We had cowered in our trenches and dugouts.
At ten minutes to midnight we were ordered out of our trenches. The conditions seemed ideal. There was a heavy freezing fog, made thicker by the yellow acrid smoke from the shelling. Visibility was less than six feet.