A story that has come full circle — 80 years after a New Zealand soldier became a prisoner of war, his family visited Toruń to follow in his footsteps and honor his memory at the former German POW camp, Stalag XXA.
The journey of their ancestor was nothing short of extraordinary. He traveled from distant New Zealand to fight in Europe during World War II. Captured after the Battle of Crete, he was transported — like many Allied POWs — by train for eleven days, arriving in Toruń in February, where he was held in Stalag XXA, the German prisoner-of-war camp.
The details of his captivity in and around Toruń remain incomplete. However, from the surviving records, we know he was held in several forts, worked on a local farm, and was later forced to join an evacuation march deep into Germany. During the march, he suffered severe frostbite and lost both legs. Remarkably, thanks to the intervention of the Red Cross — and reportedly a bribe — he was transferred to an American military hospital and eventually returned home to New Zealand.
Now, eight decades later, his family made the long journey to Toruń to visit the city where he had once been imprisoned. Although the exact sites could not be fully identified, Stalag XXA in Toruń served as a powerful symbol of the past they were seeking to reconnect with.
We did everything we could to share the history, show meaningful locations, and convey what life might have been like for British and Commonwealth POWs in the German POW camp in Toruń. We believe this visit was meaningful, emotional, and successful for our guests from the farthest corners of the world — visitors who are always warmly welcomed in Toruń.
It is a true honor to support families in discovering stories hidden for decades and to help preserve the legacy of the POWs held in Stalag XXA during the Second World War.
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