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Show HA RL HADE un 1 2 H a k d my accompanist and me if we would be interested. ' ur w w uld g ut.' And we went. We had a jeep and an American driver. We got new uni~ rm , th khaki uniforms· the yellow-brownish one- new shoes mahogany color or brown color- and a mall PW on the back a very small PW. So, before we left the hospital with the jeep, the sergeant came and he said orne here." And he checked us to see if we had proper clothes. We had new uniforms, pressed here and pressed everywhere. He said, "Okay, go ahead." Every time out of the hospital we had to be checked how we looked. So, we went several times. One time I was singing in a camp, and there came one to me, a guy, and he gave me a piece of paper that said, "Dear Hans, please come after the concert to barrack No.9." I went, and there was a brother of someone from my hometown in Dresden, and we grew up as children together. But he went away from the Church, and he didn't come anymore to church. So, I know his brother. He was active in church, and the mother-! was home teacher there. So Leopold was his name. I said, "Leopold, how are you?" He said, "Hans, ja, ja, ja." It was so wonderful. We talked a little bit together, and I said-his name was Leopold-"Leopold, can you see? Are you wounded?" He said, "No, I am okay, and the Lord has blessed us, don't you think?" I said, "yes, I know. Don't you think the best way to say thank you to our Heavenly Father is, when we come home to get active in the church again?" He said to me, "Hans, I promise you." I said, "Don't promise me. Promise this to our Heavenly Father. Tell him in a prayer that you will go back." And he became active in the church, and I didn't hear from him-nothing more. But later 21 |