‘The Americans Said, ‘Turkey With All The Fixings” | Female German POWs Wept at Thanksgiving

The autumn wind in Pennsylvania did not howl like the wind in Germany; it sighed, a long, mournful sound that swept across the rolling hills surrounding Camp Reynolds. By late November 1944, that sigh had become the soundtrack to Sophie’s existence.

Sophie, once a signals officer in the German Women’s Auxiliary, stood by the window of Barrack 4, her fingers tracing the frost forming on the glass. She was twenty-four, but in the reflection, she saw a woman who looked old enough to be her own mother. Her uniform, once a source of pride, was now a drab, ill-fitting relic of a country she no longer recognized.

Behind her, the barrack was silent. There were fifty-seven of them in total, a collective of nurses, clerks, and technicians who had been plucked from the chaotic, burning retreat across France and deposited here, in the heart of rural America. They had been fed a steady diet of propaganda for years: the Americans were savages, a mongrel race of gluttons and cowards who would starve their prisoners to fuel their own decadence.

Sophie had expected the barbed wire. She had expected the cold. She had expected the cruelty. But what she had not expected was the quiet, terrifying indifference of the guards. They didn’t scream. They didn’t strike. They simply went about their business with a calm, bureaucratic efficiency that felt more like a judgment than a punishment.

“They are bringing in crates,” Elspeth, a young medical assistant, said from her cot. Her voice was thin. “More supplies. Always more supplies.”

Sophie turned. “It doesn’t matter what they bring, Elspeth. We are guests of the state, nothing more.”

“They aren’t treating us like enemies,” Elspeth whispered, her eyes wide. “They treat us like… like we’re waiting for a train that is never coming.”

The catalyst for their unraveling was not a grand act of defiance, but a simple, bureaucratic notice pinned to the mess hall door. It was mid-November, and the camp commander, Captain Helen Morrison, had announced that the camp would be observing the American holiday of Thanksgiving.

When the news reached the barracks, it was met with a stunned silence.

“Thanksgiving?” one of the older clerks scoffed. “A celebration of colonial greed. They want to flaunt their larders while we eat their scraps.”

But Sophie looked at the mess hall. Over the past week, the guards—led by a young, somber corporal named James Hartley—had been working with a frantic, uncharacteristic energy. Hartley, a boy who had lost a brother at Omaha Beach, seemed to be pouring every ounce of his grief into the preparation of the meal. He was the one who had cleared the tables, the one who had scrubbed the floor until it shone, and the one who had insisted that the women be allowed to help in the kitchen.

It was in that kitchen that Sophie first saw the turkeys.

They were massive, golden-brown, and roasted to a state of perfection that she had never seen in her life. The smell—rosemary, sage, butter, and slow-roasted meat—was an assault on her senses. It was a smell that belonged to childhood, to a time before the mobilization, before the static of the radio, before the burning of Europe.

“Why?” Sophie asked Hartley, who was lifting a heavy roasting pan out of the oven.

Hartley didn’t look up. He wiped sweat from his forehead with his forearm. “Because it’s Thursday, ma’am. And because nobody should spend a day like this without a meal that reminds them of home.”

“We are not at home,” Sophie said, her voice sharp. “We are in a prison camp.”

Hartley stopped. He looked at her then, and for the first time, she saw the raw, jagged edges of his own pain. “I know that. But for a few hours, the war isn’t in this room. That’s the point.”

Thanksgiving Day dawned gray and overcast, the sky a flat, impenetrable sheet of iron. When the mess hall doors opened, the fifty-seven women filed in with their usual military discipline, their heads bowed, their eyes fixed on the floor.

They expected the usual: a tin tray, a scoop of lukewarm stew, a piece of hard bread.

Instead, they walked into a transformed world.

The mess hall was glowing. Someone had scavenged autumn leaves—bright reds and deep oranges—and scattered them across the white tablecloths. There were paper turkeys fashioned from construction paper, and the air was so thick with the scent of roasted meat and spices that it was difficult to breathe.

But it was the food itself that brought them to a halt. The tables were groaning under the weight of platters piled high with sliced turkey, bowls of mashed potatoes whipped into creamy clouds, stuffing that smelled of herbs and sausage, and bright, tart cranberry sauce. There were pies—pumpkin and apple—sitting on the sideboards, their crusts golden and flaky.

The women stopped dead. It was as if a physical wall had suddenly materialized in front of them.

“Sit,” Captain Morrison said, her voice calm. “Today, you are not prisoners. Today, you are our guests.”

The word hung in the air: Guests.

A ripple of disbelief passed through the room. Sophie watched as a young clerk next to her let out a sound—half-sob, half-gasp. Then, as if a signal had been given, the discipline of the German military broke. One by one, the women began to weep. They didn’t cry because they were hungry; they cried because the kindness was an unbearable weight.

They sat at the tables, the guards moving among them not as captors, but as servers. Hartley was there, smiling awkwardly as he placed a large serving of turkey onto Sophie’s plate.

“Go on,” he said softly. “It’s good.”

Sophie picked up her fork. Her hand was shaking so violently that the silverware clattered against the china. She took a bite. The richness of the butter, the salt of the turkey, the sweetness of the potatoes—it was an emotional detonation. It tasted like everything they had been told they were fighting for, and everything they had been told the enemy was incapable of providing.

It was the taste of humanity.

The meal progressed in a daze of muffled conversation and intermittent weeping. The guards, who had been trained to view these women as the embodiment of the enemy, found themselves sitting down as the plates were cleared.

Sophie found herself sitting across from Hartley. The silence was heavy, but it was no longer the silence of suspicion.

“My brother,” Hartley said, his voice quiet, “he loved cranberry sauce. He used to eat it by the spoonful.”

Sophie looked at her own plate. She thought of her brother, Hans, who had been sent to the Eastern Front. She hadn’t heard from him in eighteen months. “I had a brother,” she said, her voice sounding foreign to her own ears. “He was a gardener. He loved the smell of wet earth in the spring.”

“Did he come home?” Hartley asked.

Sophie shook her head.

They sat there, the American soldier and the German auxiliary officer, linked by the universal language of grief. The war had tried to turn them into abstractions—symbols of good and evil—but in the presence of the food, the decorations, and the fragile, fleeting peace of the afternoon, the abstractions fell away.

They were just two people who had lost people they loved to a fire they couldn’t control.

The aftermath of the meal was a slow, agonizing process of reassessment. For the next few days, the camp was filled with an uneasy energy. The women stopped speaking only in German. They began to ask questions. They began to listen to the guards’ stories.

The propaganda had insisted that the Americans were a people without depth, without culture, and without mercy. But the meal had been a window into a different truth. It had revealed a people who, despite the brutality of the conflict, were trying to cling to the rituals of civilization.

One evening, Sophie found herself in the library, looking at a book of American poetry that Hartley had left out. She realized that she had been living in a dream—or rather, a nightmare—and that the waking world was far more complex, and far more painful, than she had ever imagined.

“You’re thinking of leaving,” Hartley said from the doorway.

Sophie looked up. “We have to go back. Even if there is nothing left. It is where we belong.”

“Is it?” Hartley asked. “I don’t think any of us are going back to where we started. I think we’re all going back to a place that doesn’t exist anymore.”

He was right. Sophie knew that the Germany she had left behind had been consumed by the very ideology she had served. She realized that she was not returning to a nation, but to a void. And yet, she was not the same woman who had arrived at Camp Reynolds. She was a woman who had been served turkey by a boy who had lost a brother, a woman who had learned that kindness could be a weapon against hatred.

By the spring of 1945, the news of the collapse of the German military was constant. The surrender came in May, and with it, the processing for repatriation began.

The atmosphere in the camp turned frantic. Some of the women were desperate to return; others were paralyzed by the fear of what they would find. Sophie, however, had made her choice. She had been offered a chance to apply for a visa to stay, to work in a hospital in Philadelphia, but she had declined.

“Why?” Hartley asked on their final day.

“Because I have to go back,” Sophie said. “I have to help pick up the pieces. I was part of the machine that broke everything. If I stay here, I am running away. If I go back, maybe I can do something, even if it is only to plant a garden.”

“You’ll never forget the Thanksgiving, will you?” Hartley asked.

Sophie looked at the mess hall. She could still see the paper turkeys, the autumn leaves, and the golden, steaming platters. She could still feel the weight of the fork in her hand and the tear on her cheek.

“No,” she said. “I will never forget it. It was the day the war stopped, even if only for a few hours.”

The departure was quiet. The women were loaded onto the trucks, their bags packed with the meager necessities allowed for the journey. As the trucks pulled out of the gate, Sophie looked back one last time.

She saw Hartley standing by the fence. He wasn’t saluting. He was just watching, his hands in his pockets, a young man who had lost a brother and had spent his holiday trying to feed the women who were supposedly his enemies.

Sophie closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She could still taste the cranberry sauce. It was a memory that burned, a reminder of the fragility of the peace they had shared.

As the truck turned onto the main road, the vast, rolling hills of Pennsylvania began to fade. She was returning to a world of rubble, to a landscape defined by the failure of her country and the destruction of her home. But as the road stretched out before her, she felt a strange, terrifying sense of agency.

She wasn’t the signals officer anymore. She was a witness. She was a woman who knew that even in the heart of the most monstrous conflict, there was a space for a table, a plate, and a moment of shared, agonizing grace.

The truck picked up speed, the engine humming against the silence of the countryside. Sophie looked at the women around her. They were all silent, their faces turned toward the horizon, their expressions a mix of fear and resolve.

She reached into her pocket and touched the small, dried-up piece of autumn leaf she had kept from the Thanksgiving table. It was brittle, fragile, and utterly inconsequential, but it was real.

She was going home. She was going to face the ruins. And she was going to face them with the knowledge that the world was capable of being something other than a graveyard.

The truck disappeared over the ridge, a small, dark shape in the vastness of the morning. The war was over, but the work—the long, slow, quiet work of being human—had only just begun. And as Sophie watched the Pennsylvania hills recede, she knew that she would never be the same. She would never again look at a meal, or a person, or a war, with the same blind certainty.

She had been fed, she had been seen, and she had been changed. And in that, she had found the only victory that truly mattered. The road ahead was long, and the ruins would be deep, but as the sun broke over the horizon, she felt a flicker of something she hadn’t felt in years.

It wasn’t hope, not yet. It was something more solid, more enduring.

It was the memory of a table, set for guests, in the middle of a war.

And that, she knew, would be enough to sustain her through the long, cold winter of the reconstruction.

The truck sped on, disappearing into the light, leaving the camp behind as a testament to the fact that even when the world is ending, there is always, always room for a seat at the table.