Why Italian POWs Begged America to Keep Them After WW2
September 3rd, 1945 1230 Hours Camp Winegardden Missouri Giuseppe Farina stood in formation with 300 other Italian pr1soners of w4r listening to Major William Henderson explain that they would be repatriated to Italy within six weeks the w4r had been over for four months Italy had surrendered two years earlier and become a co belligerent f1ghting alongside the allies the legal justification for holding Italian sold1ers as pr1soners had disappeared and the United States government wanted to reduce the administrative
and financial burden of housing 51,000 men who were no longer enemies Giuseppe should have been celebrating he’d been captured in Tunisia in May 1943 had spent 28 months as pr1soner in America and should have been desperate to return home to Naples and the family he hadn’t seen in three years but as Henderson spoke about repatriation ships that would depart from East Coast ports in October Giuseppe felt dread rather than joy he didn’t want to go home he wanted to stay in Missouri working on the farm where he’d spent the past 16 months
living in conditions that were better than anything he’d experienced in Italy even before the w4r the announcement ended the formation broke up Giuseppe walked back to his barracks with Antonio Russo another pr1soner from Naples who’d become his closest friend during captivity they didn’t speak immediately both were processing information that created emotional conflict they couldn’t easily articulate finally Antonio broke the silence I don’t want to go back he said quietly there’s nothing left in Naples
the city is rubble my father’s shop was destr0yed in the b0mbing my mother wrote that they’re eating gra.ss to survive what am I returning to Giuseppe nodded his own family’s letters had described similar conditions food shortages collapsed economy destr0yed infrastructure and general cha0s that made daily surv1val precarious the Italy that existed in 1945 bore no resemblance to the country he’d left in 1940 when he’d been conscr.i.pted into Mussolini’s army that Italy had been poor but functional
with social structures and economic opportunities that made life possible if not comfortable The Italy of 1945 was devastated nation struggl1ng to feed its population and rebuild from years of w4r that had destr0yed nearly everything America by contrast was prosperous beyond anything Giuseppe had imagined possible the farm where he worked had so much food that excess production was being stored or even plowed under because markets couldn’t absorb the surplus the farmer’s family ate three meals daily
with meat at every meal abundance that Italian peasants couldn’t have afforded even during peacetime prosperity the work was hard but fairly compensated the living conditions were clean and comfortable and the treatment was respectful in ways that Giuseppe had never experienced from authorities in Italy maybe we can stay Giuseppe said knowing even as he spoke that this was probably impossible maybe the Americans will let us emigrate Antonio laughed bitterly we’re pr1soners of w4r enemy sold1ers why would they let us stay when there are millions of Italians
trying to emigrate legally the question was valid but Giuseppe couldn’t let go of hope that somehow some way he might be allowed to remain in the country that had treated him better during captivity than Italy had treated him as a citizen the capture that changed everything Giuseppe Farina had surrendered to American forces near Tunis on May 7th, 1943 during the final collapse of axis resistance in North Africa he’d been a reluctant sold1er from the beginning conscr.i.pted in 1940 poorly trained inadequately equipped
and sent to f1ght in desert campaign where Italian forces were consistently outmatched by British and American armies that had superior equipment logistics and tactical competence the surrender had come as relief Giuseppe had spent three years watching Italian military incompetence get his comrades k1lled had endured hunger and disease that k1lled more Italian sold1ers than combat and had recognized months before the final defeat that Italy was losing the w4r and that continuing to f1ght was pointless sacrifice when American tanks surrounded his position
and his officers ordered surrender Giuseppe had laid down his rifle with genuine gratitude that the w4r was over for him the initial processing had been confusing but not brut4l American sold1ers had searched pr1soners for w3apons separated officers from enlisted men and organized transportation to transit camps where tens of thousands of captured Italian sold1ers were being held pending decisions about their eventual disposition the treatment was correct but impersonal pr1soners were fed provided basic medical care
and housed in tents that were crowded but adequate Giuseppe had expected much worse Italian propaganda had portrayed Americans as barbaric capitalists who exploited workers and treated foreigners with cont3mpt but the American sold1ers he encountered were professional and generally decent treating pr1soners according to Geneva Convention requirements without the casual brut4lity that had characterized Italian military culture the food was adequate the medical care was competent and the guards were firm but not cruel
the surprise had come when Giuseppe Learned he would be transported to the United States rather than remaining in North African camps or being transferred to British custody The United States was facing severe agricultural labor shortages because millions of American men were serving in the military the solution was using pr1soner of w4r labor on American farms under conditions that complied with international law while addressing domestic needs that couldn’t be met through civilian workforce alone Giuseppe had
crossed the Atlantic on a Liberty ship part of a convoy carrying 6,000 Italian pr1soners from North Africa to American ports the voyage took 19 days with pr1soners housed in holds that were crowded but tolerable the crossing was Giuseppe’s first experience with the vast scale of American industrial capacity the convoy included 40 merchant ships escorted by aircraft carriers and destr0yers demonstrating maritime power that dw4rfed anything Italy could have a.ssembled arrival in America had been overwhelming Giuseppe disembarked in Norfolk
Virginia in July 1943 processed through reception center that documented pr1soners and a.ssigned them to camps throughout the country within a week he was on a train heading west tow4rd Missouri watching American landscape pa.ss outside windows farmland that seemed endless towns that looked prosperous and undamaged civilians who weren’t showing signs of w4rtime privation that had become universal in Italy the camp that felt like home Camp Wyngarden Missouri was one of approximately 500 pr1soner of w4r camps
that the United States operated during the w4r holding Germans Italians and smaller numbers of Japanese pr1soners captured in various theaters the camp held approximately 600 Italian pr1soners who worked primarily on agricultural labor in surrounding counties where farming operations desperately needed workers to replace sons and hired hands who were serving in the military the camp itself was basic but comfortable by military standards pr1soners lived in wooden barracks with proper bunks heating
stoves for winter and adequate ventilation for summer sanitation facilities met American military standards rather than the primitive conditions that Italian sold1ers had endured in North Africa food was provided in quantities and quality that matched what American sold1ers received substantially better than Italian military rations even before the shortages that had characterized the final years of Italian participation in the w4r the daily routine was structured but not harsh pr1soners woke at 0 600
attended roll call ate breakfast and were transported to worksites where they performed agricultural labor under supervision of farmers who’d contracted with the government for pr1soner labor the work day typically lasted eight to 10 hours depending on season and crop requirements evenings were free time when pr1soners could read write letters play cards or soccer or participate in recreational activities organized by camp administrators Giuseppe had been a.ssigned to work on the Schneider Farm
a 200 acre operation growing corn wheat and vegetables for commercial markets the farmer Herman Schneider was third generation German American whose grandparents had emigrated from Bavaria in the 1880s Schneider spoke some German that was similar enough to Giuseppe’s basic German that they could communicate haltingly until Giuseppe’s English improved enough to make conversation easier the relationship between pr1soner and farmer had started as purely economic transaction Schneider needed labor Giuseppe was available the government facilitated the arrangement
through regulations that paid pr1soners 80 cents per day while charging farmers rates comparable to hiring civilian workers but the relationship evolved quickly into something more personal as Schneider recognized Giuseppe’s competence and work ethic Giuseppe had grown up on a small farm in Campania before his family moved to Naples when he was twelve he understood agriculture instinctively knew how to read weather and soil recognized when crops needed attention and worked with efficiency
that came from years of practical experience Schneider appreciated these qualities and began treating Giuseppe less like hired labor and more like valued employee by the end of the first harvest season in fall 1943 Giuseppe was eating lunch with the Schneider family rather than separately in the fields by spring 1944 he was being invited to the farmhouse for Sunday dinners after church services that Schneider’s wife insisted he attended because she believed everyone needed spiritual community
regardless of nationality or pr1soner status by summer 1944 Giuseppe had become part of the extended Schneider household in ways that transcended his legal status as enemy pr1soner September 1945 and the announcement nobody wanted the repatriation announcement in September 1945 created responses among Italian pr1soners that American administrators hadn’t anticipated the expectation had been that pr1soners would be eager to return home after years of captivity instead significant numbers expressed reluctance or outright refusal to be repatriated to Italy
where conditions remained c4tastrophic despite the w4r being over Giuseppe wasn’t alone in his desire to remain in America he discussed the situation with dozens of other pr1soners at Camp Win Garden discovering that most shared his feelings they developed relationships with American families had Learned English had adapted to American culture and had experienced prosperity that made returning to Italian poverty seem like punishment rather than liberation the legal status as pr1soners was less important
than the practical reality that life in American captivity was better than life in Italian freedom some pr1soners approached American administrators requesting permission to remain in the United States permanently the requests were denied immigration law didn’t allow enemy pr1soners to simply convert their status to legal residence the regulations required repatriation period any future immigration would need to follow normal legal processes that included waiting periods quotas and documentation
that most pr1soners couldn’t provide the denials created desperation among pr1soners who’d convince themselves that maybe somehow American mercy would extend to allowing them to stay Giuseppe wrote letter to Herman Schneider asking if Schneider could sponsor his immigration Schneider wanted to help but explained that the process was complex and likely impossible while Giuseppe remained cla.ssified as pr1soner of w4r the best option would be repatriation to Italy followed by immigration application through normal channels
but waiting lists for Italian immigration were years long and approval wasn’t guaranteed Giuseppe also wrote to his mother explaining that he would be returning to Italy but hoping to emigrate back to America eventually his mother’s response was characteristically practical come home Giuseppe your family needs you America will still be there later if god wills it but your family needs you now the guilt was overwhelming Giuseppe had been living comfortably while his family starved he’d been safe
while they endured b0mbing and occupation he’d been well fed while they’d been desperate his desire to remain in America rather than return to help them seemed selfish and disloyal even though returning to Italy meant giving up prospects that would never be available there the farewell that nobody wanted October 12th, 1945 Camp Winington Missouri the pr1soners a.ssembled for final formation before boarding buses that would transport them to trains heading to East Coast ports Giuseppe stood with Antonio Russo and 300 others
wearing the same worn uniforms they’d been issued two years earlier carrying canvas bags containing their few possessions and letters from American families they were leaving behind Herman Schneider had driven to the camp to say goodbye bringing Margaret and their two sons despite the difficulty of leaving the farm during harvest season the visit violated regulations about civilian contact with pr1soners but the camp commander had chosen to overlook the violation because he understood that these relationships had transcended normal pr1soner guard dynamics
Margaret handed Giuseppe a package wrapped in brown paper food for the journey she explained though Giuseppe suspected it was mostly excuse to have something to give him that would express affection she couldn’t articulate directly the two boys presented drawings they’d made crude crayon pictures of the farm with stick figures representing Giuseppe working alongside Herman Giuseppe accepted the gifts with emotions he couldn’t control tears running down his face despite his attempts to maintain dignity Herman sh00k Giuseppe’s hand firmly
holding eye contact in a way that communicated everything that couldn’t be said through words limited by language barriers and emotional constraints you’ve been good worker and good friend Hermann said in careful English you’re welcome to come back anytime as immigrant as visitor as wh@tever you’ll always have place here Giuseppe nodded unable to speak without breaking down completely he’d prepared a speech in English thanking the Schneider family for their kindness but the words wouldn’t come he simply embraced Herman briefly
touched the boys heads gently and nodded to Margaret before turning away to board the bus similar scenes played out across Camp Wyngarden as pr1soners said goodbye to farmers families and friends they’d developed during two years of captivity that had become something else entirely American civilians cried openly pr1soners maintained composure until buses pulled away then many broke down as they left behind the country that had treated them better during impr1sonment than their own country had treated them as citizens
the train journey to New York took three days Giuseppe and Antonio sat together not speaking much watching American landscape pa.ss outside windows for the last time the abundance was still visible everywhere farms prosperous and productive towns intact and functioning people well fed and apparently optimistic about futures that didn’t include the devastation that was waiting in Italy the return to reality Giuseppe arrived in Naples in November 1945 aboard a Liberty ship carrying 2,000 repatriated Italian pr1soners the voyage had taken 11 days
with former pr1soners housed in conditions similar to their original Atlantic crossing two years earlier many were sick from seasickness and anx1ety about what they were returning to Naples Harbor was partially destr0yed with sunken ships visible and port facilities damaged but functioning minimally the city beyond the harbor was rubble Approximately 60% of buildings had been damaged or destr0yed by b0mbing artillery and deliberate German demolition during their retreat the streets were crowded with refugees displaced persons and desperate civilians
trying to survive in conditions that approached famine Giuseppe found his family living in three rooms of a partially destr0yed building sharing space with another family because their original home no longer existed his mother had aged 15 years in the three years since he’d last seen her his sister Maria was skeletal despite the liberation and supposed Allied a.ssistance his father looked defeated in ways that went beyond physical deterioration the reunion was joyful but also revealed the vast
gap between Giuseppe’s experience and his family’s he’d spent two years eating well living in comfortable conditions and working in an environment where effort was rew4rded fairly they’d spent the same two years hungry frightened and struggl1ng to survive each day the divergence had created experiential gap that couldn’t be bridged through conversation Giuseppe tried to help his family rebuild using money he’d saved from his pr1soner wages and knowledge he’d gained from working on American Farm but the challenges were overwhelming
Naples had no functioning economy no available materials for reconstruction no opportunities for employment that would provide wages sufficient to support family the a.ssistance promised by Allied occupation authorities was inadequate and inconsistently delivered within six months Giuseppe made decision that would define his future he would immigrate to America legally following the process that Herman Schneider had explained was possible but difficult he would apply for visa wait for quota numbers
provide documentation proving he wouldn’t become public charge it might take years it would definitely be difficult but America was the only place where Giuseppe believed he could build future that included prosperity rather than just surv1val the second journey to America Giuseppe Farina arrived in New York in April 1952 as legal immigrant rather than pr1soner of w4r the process had taken six and a/2 years applying for visa waiting for quota numbers providing documentation enduring bureaucratic delays
that seemed designed to discourage applicants but Herman Schneider had provided employment sponsorship documenting that Giuseppe had a job waiting in Missouri and wouldn’t require public a.ssistance the sponsorship had been essential for immigration approval that might never have come without American citizen willing to guarantee Giuseppe’s economic viability the transformation from pr1soner to immigrant was complete but also revealed that Giuseppe’s fundamental relationship with America hadn’t changed
he’d always understood that America represented opportunity that Italy couldn’t provide his legal status had evolved from enemy pr1soner to legal resident to eventual citizen but his appreciation for American prosperity and freedom remained constant throughout these transitions Giuseppe worked on the Schneider farm for 12 more years eventually saving enough to purchase his own small farm in 1964 he married an Italian immigrant in 1953 had three children and built life that combined Italian cultural heritage
with American economic opportunity he became naturalized citizen in 1957 voted in every election afterw4rd and told anyone who would listen that America had saved his life twice once by capturing him in Tunisia and once by allowing him to immigrate after the w4r his experience wasn’t unique approximately 15,000 Italian pr1soners of w4r eventually immigrated to the United States after being repatriated following legal processes that took years but ultimately succeeded because Americans who’d known them during captivity
provided sponsorships and documentation that immigration authorities required the former pr1soners became American citizens est4blished families and built lives that wouldn’t have been possible in postw4r Italy where economic opportunities remained limited for decades why they begged to stay the Italian pr1soners who begged to remain in America after World W4r two we’re responding to direct comparison between American prosperity and Italian poverty that revealed truths about economic systems and social organization
that propaganda on both sides had obscured America in 1945 was the world’s dominant industrial power producing approximately half of global manufacturing output and enjoying living standards that exceeded anything in human history Italy in 1945 was devastated nation where basic surv1val was challenging and prospects for improvement were uncertain the pr1soners had experienced this contrast personally and intimately they’d lived in both systems worked in both economies and understood through direct observation
which society provided better opportunities for ordinary people to build decent lives the answer wasn’t ambiguous or subject to ideological interpretation America offered possibilities that Italy couldn’t match but beyond economic considerations was moral dimension that pr1soners like Giuseppe had recognized during their captivity America had treated them according to international law even when doing so was inconvenient and expensive Americans had shown mercy when revenge would have been understandable
American families had welcomed pr1soners into their homes and lives despite having sons f1ghting overseas against axis forces these behaviors revealed values and character that transcended temporary military conflicts and demonstrated civilization that was worth joining rather than opposing the begging to stay wasn’t rejection of Italian identity or heritage Giuseppe and thousands of others maintained strong connections to Italian culture throughout their lives in America it was recognition that America provided opportunities and values
that made building good lives possible in ways that Italy couldn’t offer during postw4r decades when reconstruction was slow and economic opportunities were limited the story of Italian pr1soners who wanted to stay in America revealed truth that applied broadly beyond the specific historical circumstances societies reveal their character through how they treat those who are powerless and vulnerable through whether they maintain humanitarian values when doing so is difficult and through whether they offer opportunities based on merit rather than birth
America in 1945 pa.ssed these tests in ways that made former enemies want to become citizens that transformed pr1soners into patriots and that demonstrated values were worth defending because they produced results that justified the claims democratic societies made about human dignity and individual opportunity Giuseppe Farina d1ed in 2001 at age 83 surrounded by children grandchildren and great grandchildren who existed because American sailors had captured him in Tunisia in 1943 and because American farmers had treated him with kindness
during two years of impr1sonment that became foundation for life he built across five decades as American citizen his gravestone in Missouri includes his birth location Naples Italy and his de4th location Jefferson City Missouri documenting journey from enemy pr1soner to American citizen that represented one man’s experience of values that made America worth loving even for those who’d started as enemies
September 3rd, 1945 1230 Hours Camp Winegardden Missouri Giuseppe Farina stood in formation with 300 other Italian pr1soners of w4r listening to Major William Henderson explain that they would be repatriated to Italy within six weeks the w4r had been over for four months Italy had surrendered two years earlier and become a co belligerent f1ghting alongside the allies the legal justification for holding Italian sold1ers as pr1soners had disappeared and the United States government wanted to reduce the administrative
and financial burden of housing 51,000 men who were no longer enemies Giuseppe should have been celebrating he’d been captured in Tunisia in May 1943 had spent 28 months as pr1soner in America and should have been desperate to return home to Naples and the family he hadn’t seen in three years but as Henderson spoke about repatriation ships that would depart from East Coast ports in October Giuseppe felt dread rather than joy he didn’t want to go home he wanted to stay in Missouri working on the farm where he’d spent the past 16 months
living in conditions that were better than anything he’d experienced in Italy even before the w4r the announcement ended the formation broke up Giuseppe walked back to his barracks with Antonio Russo another pr1soner from Naples who’d become his closest friend during captivity they didn’t speak immediately both were processing information that created emotional conflict they couldn’t easily articulate finally Antonio broke the silence I don’t want to go back he said quietly there’s nothing left in Naples
the city is rubble my father’s shop was destr0yed in the b0mbing my mother wrote that they’re eating gra.ss to survive what am I returning to Giuseppe nodded his own family’s letters had described similar conditions food shortages collapsed economy destr0yed infrastructure and general cha0s that made daily surv1val precarious the Italy that existed in 1945 bore no resemblance to the country he’d left in 1940 when he’d been conscr.i.pted into Mussolini’s army that Italy had been poor but functional
with social structures and economic opportunities that made life possible if not comfortable The Italy of 1945 was devastated nation struggl1ng to feed its population and rebuild from years of w4r that had destr0yed nearly everything America by contrast was prosperous beyond anything Giuseppe had imagined possible the farm where he worked had so much food that excess production was being stored or even plowed under because markets couldn’t absorb the surplus the farmer’s family ate three meals daily
with meat at every meal abundance that Italian peasants couldn’t have afforded even during peacetime prosperity the work was hard but fairly compensated the living conditions were clean and comfortable and the treatment was respectful in ways that Giuseppe had never experienced from authorities in Italy maybe we can stay Giuseppe said knowing even as he spoke that this was probably impossible maybe the Americans will let us emigrate Antonio laughed bitterly we’re pr1soners of w4r enemy sold1ers why would they let us stay when there are millions of Italians
trying to emigrate legally the question was valid but Giuseppe couldn’t let go of hope that somehow some way he might be allowed to remain in the country that had treated him better during captivity than Italy had treated him as a citizen the capture that changed everything Giuseppe Farina had surrendered to American forces near Tunis on May 7th, 1943 during the final collapse of axis resistance in North Africa he’d been a reluctant sold1er from the beginning conscr.i.pted in 1940 poorly trained inadequately equipped
and sent to f1ght in desert campaign where Italian forces were consistently outmatched by British and American armies that had superior equipment logistics and tactical competence the surrender had come as relief Giuseppe had spent three years watching Italian military incompetence get his comrades k1lled had endured hunger and disease that k1lled more Italian sold1ers than combat and had recognized months before the final defeat that Italy was losing the w4r and that continuing to f1ght was pointless sacrifice when American tanks surrounded his position
and his officers ordered surrender Giuseppe had laid down his rifle with genuine gratitude that the w4r was over for him the initial processing had been confusing but not brut4l American sold1ers had searched pr1soners for w3apons separated officers from enlisted men and organized transportation to transit camps where tens of thousands of captured Italian sold1ers were being held pending decisions about their eventual disposition the treatment was correct but impersonal pr1soners were fed provided basic medical care
and housed in tents that were crowded but adequate Giuseppe had expected much worse Italian propaganda had portrayed Americans as barbaric capitalists who exploited workers and treated foreigners with cont3mpt but the American sold1ers he encountered were professional and generally decent treating pr1soners according to Geneva Convention requirements without the casual brut4lity that had characterized Italian military culture the food was adequate the medical care was competent and the guards were firm but not cruel
the surprise had come when Giuseppe Learned he would be transported to the United States rather than remaining in North African camps or being transferred to British custody The United States was facing severe agricultural labor shortages because millions of American men were serving in the military the solution was using pr1soner of w4r labor on American farms under conditions that complied with international law while addressing domestic needs that couldn’t be met through civilian workforce alone Giuseppe had
crossed the Atlantic on a Liberty ship part of a convoy carrying 6,000 Italian pr1soners from North Africa to American ports the voyage took 19 days with pr1soners housed in holds that were crowded but tolerable the crossing was Giuseppe’s first experience with the vast scale of American industrial capacity the convoy included 40 merchant ships escorted by aircraft carriers and destr0yers demonstrating maritime power that dw4rfed anything Italy could have a.ssembled arrival in America had been overwhelming Giuseppe disembarked in Norfolk
Virginia in July 1943 processed through reception center that documented pr1soners and a.ssigned them to camps throughout the country within a week he was on a train heading west tow4rd Missouri watching American landscape pa.ss outside windows farmland that seemed endless towns that looked prosperous and undamaged civilians who weren’t showing signs of w4rtime privation that had become universal in Italy the camp that felt like home Camp Wyngarden Missouri was one of approximately 500 pr1soner of w4r camps
that the United States operated during the w4r holding Germans Italians and smaller numbers of Japanese pr1soners captured in various theaters the camp held approximately 600 Italian pr1soners who worked primarily on agricultural labor in surrounding counties where farming operations desperately needed workers to replace sons and hired hands who were serving in the military the camp itself was basic but comfortable by military standards pr1soners lived in wooden barracks with proper bunks heating
stoves for winter and adequate ventilation for summer sanitation facilities met American military standards rather than the primitive conditions that Italian sold1ers had endured in North Africa food was provided in quantities and quality that matched what American sold1ers received substantially better than Italian military rations even before the shortages that had characterized the final years of Italian participation in the w4r the daily routine was structured but not harsh pr1soners woke at 0 600
attended roll call ate breakfast and were transported to worksites where they performed agricultural labor under supervision of farmers who’d contracted with the government for pr1soner labor the work day typically lasted eight to 10 hours depending on season and crop requirements evenings were free time when pr1soners could read write letters play cards or soccer or participate in recreational activities organized by camp administrators Giuseppe had been a.ssigned to work on the Schneider Farm
a 200 acre operation growing corn wheat and vegetables for commercial markets the farmer Herman Schneider was third generation German American whose grandparents had emigrated from Bavaria in the 1880s Schneider spoke some German that was similar enough to Giuseppe’s basic German that they could communicate haltingly until Giuseppe’s English improved enough to make conversation easier the relationship between pr1soner and farmer had started as purely economic transaction Schneider needed labor Giuseppe was available the government facilitated the arrangement
through regulations that paid pr1soners 80 cents per day while charging farmers rates comparable to hiring civilian workers but the relationship evolved quickly into something more personal as Schneider recognized Giuseppe’s competence and work ethic Giuseppe had grown up on a small farm in Campania before his family moved to Naples when he was twelve he understood agriculture instinctively knew how to read weather and soil recognized when crops needed attention and worked with efficiency
that came from years of practical experience Schneider appreciated these qualities and began treating Giuseppe less like hired labor and more like valued employee by the end of the first harvest season in fall 1943 Giuseppe was eating lunch with the Schneider family rather than separately in the fields by spring 1944 he was being invited to the farmhouse for Sunday dinners after church services that Schneider’s wife insisted he attended because she believed everyone needed spiritual community
regardless of nationality or pr1soner status by summer 1944 Giuseppe had become part of the extended Schneider household in ways that transcended his legal status as enemy pr1soner September 1945 and the announcement nobody wanted the repatriation announcement in September 1945 created responses among Italian pr1soners that American administrators hadn’t anticipated the expectation had been that pr1soners would be eager to return home after years of captivity instead significant numbers expressed reluctance or outright refusal to be repatriated to Italy
where conditions remained c4tastrophic despite the w4r being over Giuseppe wasn’t alone in his desire to remain in America he discussed the situation with dozens of other pr1soners at Camp Win Garden discovering that most shared his feelings they developed relationships with American families had Learned English had adapted to American culture and had experienced prosperity that made returning to Italian poverty seem like punishment rather than liberation the legal status as pr1soners was less important
than the practical reality that life in American captivity was better than life in Italian freedom some pr1soners approached American administrators requesting permission to remain in the United States permanently the requests were denied immigration law didn’t allow enemy pr1soners to simply convert their status to legal residence the regulations required repatriation period any future immigration would need to follow normal legal processes that included waiting periods quotas and documentation
that most pr1soners couldn’t provide the denials created desperation among pr1soners who’d convince themselves that maybe somehow American mercy would extend to allowing them to stay Giuseppe wrote letter to Herman Schneider asking if Schneider could sponsor his immigration Schneider wanted to help but explained that the process was complex and likely impossible while Giuseppe remained cla.ssified as pr1soner of w4r the best option would be repatriation to Italy followed by immigration application through normal channels
but waiting lists for Italian immigration were years long and approval wasn’t guaranteed Giuseppe also wrote to his mother explaining that he would be returning to Italy but hoping to emigrate back to America eventually his mother’s response was characteristically practical come home Giuseppe your family needs you America will still be there later if god wills it but your family needs you now the guilt was overwhelming Giuseppe had been living comfortably while his family starved he’d been safe
while they endured b0mbing and occupation he’d been well fed while they’d been desperate his desire to remain in America rather than return to help them seemed selfish and disloyal even though returning to Italy meant giving up prospects that would never be available there the farewell that nobody wanted October 12th, 1945 Camp Winington Missouri the pr1soners a.ssembled for final formation before boarding buses that would transport them to trains heading to East Coast ports Giuseppe stood with Antonio Russo and 300 others
wearing the same worn uniforms they’d been issued two years earlier carrying canvas bags containing their few possessions and letters from American families they were leaving behind Herman Schneider had driven to the camp to say goodbye bringing Margaret and their two sons despite the difficulty of leaving the farm during harvest season the visit violated regulations about civilian contact with pr1soners but the camp commander had chosen to overlook the violation because he understood that these relationships had transcended normal pr1soner guard dynamics
Margaret handed Giuseppe a package wrapped in brown paper food for the journey she explained though Giuseppe suspected it was mostly excuse to have something to give him that would express affection she couldn’t articulate directly the two boys presented drawings they’d made crude crayon pictures of the farm with stick figures representing Giuseppe working alongside Herman Giuseppe accepted the gifts with emotions he couldn’t control tears running down his face despite his attempts to maintain dignity Herman sh00k Giuseppe’s hand firmly
holding eye contact in a way that communicated everything that couldn’t be said through words limited by language barriers and emotional constraints you’ve been good worker and good friend Hermann said in careful English you’re welcome to come back anytime as immigrant as visitor as wh@tever you’ll always have place here Giuseppe nodded unable to speak without breaking down completely he’d prepared a speech in English thanking the Schneider family for their kindness but the words wouldn’t come he simply embraced Herman briefly
touched the boys heads gently and nodded to Margaret before turning away to board the bus similar scenes played out across Camp Wyngarden as pr1soners said goodbye to farmers families and friends they’d developed during two years of captivity that had become something else entirely American civilians cried openly pr1soners maintained composure until buses pulled away then many broke down as they left behind the country that had treated them better during impr1sonment than their own country had treated them as citizens
the train journey to New York took three days Giuseppe and Antonio sat together not speaking much watching American landscape pa.ss outside windows for the last time the abundance was still visible everywhere farms prosperous and productive towns intact and functioning people well fed and apparently optimistic about futures that didn’t include the devastation that was waiting in Italy the return to reality Giuseppe arrived in Naples in November 1945 aboard a Liberty ship carrying 2,000 repatriated Italian pr1soners the voyage had taken 11 days
with former pr1soners housed in conditions similar to their original Atlantic crossing two years earlier many were sick from seasickness and anx1ety about what they were returning to Naples Harbor was partially destr0yed with sunken ships visible and port facilities damaged but functioning minimally the city beyond the harbor was rubble Approximately 60% of buildings had been damaged or destr0yed by b0mbing artillery and deliberate German demolition during their retreat the streets were crowded with refugees displaced persons and desperate civilians
trying to survive in conditions that approached famine Giuseppe found his family living in three rooms of a partially destr0yed building sharing space with another family because their original home no longer existed his mother had aged 15 years in the three years since he’d last seen her his sister Maria was skeletal despite the liberation and supposed Allied a.ssistance his father looked defeated in ways that went beyond physical deterioration the reunion was joyful but also revealed the vast
gap between Giuseppe’s experience and his family’s he’d spent two years eating well living in comfortable conditions and working in an environment where effort was rew4rded fairly they’d spent the same two years hungry frightened and struggl1ng to survive each day the divergence had created experiential gap that couldn’t be bridged through conversation Giuseppe tried to help his family rebuild using money he’d saved from his pr1soner wages and knowledge he’d gained from working on American Farm but the challenges were overwhelming
Naples had no functioning economy no available materials for reconstruction no opportunities for employment that would provide wages sufficient to support family the a.ssistance promised by Allied occupation authorities was inadequate and inconsistently delivered within six months Giuseppe made decision that would define his future he would immigrate to America legally following the process that Herman Schneider had explained was possible but difficult he would apply for visa wait for quota numbers
provide documentation proving he wouldn’t become public charge it might take years it would definitely be difficult but America was the only place where Giuseppe believed he could build future that included prosperity rather than just surv1val the second journey to America Giuseppe Farina arrived in New York in April 1952 as legal immigrant rather than pr1soner of w4r the process had taken six and a/2 years applying for visa waiting for quota numbers providing documentation enduring bureaucratic delays
that seemed designed to discourage applicants but Herman Schneider had provided employment sponsorship documenting that Giuseppe had a job waiting in Missouri and wouldn’t require public a.ssistance the sponsorship had been essential for immigration approval that might never have come without American citizen willing to guarantee Giuseppe’s economic viability the transformation from pr1soner to immigrant was complete but also revealed that Giuseppe’s fundamental relationship with America hadn’t changed
he’d always understood that America represented opportunity that Italy couldn’t provide his legal status had evolved from enemy pr1soner to legal resident to eventual citizen but his appreciation for American prosperity and freedom remained constant throughout these transitions Giuseppe worked on the Schneider farm for 12 more years eventually saving enough to purchase his own small farm in 1964 he married an Italian immigrant in 1953 had three children and built life that combined Italian cultural heritage
with American economic opportunity he became naturalized citizen in 1957 voted in every election afterw4rd and told anyone who would listen that America had saved his life twice once by capturing him in Tunisia and once by allowing him to immigrate after the w4r his experience wasn’t unique approximately 15,000 Italian pr1soners of w4r eventually immigrated to the United States after being repatriated following legal processes that took years but ultimately succeeded because Americans who’d known them during captivity
provided sponsorships and documentation that immigration authorities required the former pr1soners became American citizens est4blished families and built lives that wouldn’t have been possible in postw4r Italy where economic opportunities remained limited for decades why they begged to stay the Italian pr1soners who begged to remain in America after World W4r two we’re responding to direct comparison between American prosperity and Italian poverty that revealed truths about economic systems and social organization
that propaganda on both sides had obscured America in 1945 was the world’s dominant industrial power producing approximately half of global manufacturing output and enjoying living standards that exceeded anything in human history Italy in 1945 was devastated nation where basic surv1val was challenging and prospects for improvement were uncertain the pr1soners had experienced this contrast personally and intimately they’d lived in both systems worked in both economies and understood through direct observation
which society provided better opportunities for ordinary people to build decent lives the answer wasn’t ambiguous or subject to ideological interpretation America offered possibilities that Italy couldn’t match but beyond economic considerations was moral dimension that pr1soners like Giuseppe had recognized during their captivity America had treated them according to international law even when doing so was inconvenient and expensive Americans had shown mercy when revenge would have been understandable
American families had welcomed pr1soners into their homes and lives despite having sons f1ghting overseas against axis forces these behaviors revealed values and character that transcended temporary military conflicts and demonstrated civilization that was worth joining rather than opposing the begging to stay wasn’t rejection of Italian identity or heritage Giuseppe and thousands of others maintained strong connections to Italian culture throughout their lives in America it was recognition that America provided opportunities and values
that made building good lives possible in ways that Italy couldn’t offer during postw4r decades when reconstruction was slow and economic opportunities were limited the story of Italian pr1soners who wanted to stay in America revealed truth that applied broadly beyond the specific historical circumstances societies reveal their character through how they treat those who are powerless and vulnerable through whether they maintain humanitarian values when doing so is difficult and through whether they offer opportunities based on merit rather than birth
America in 1945 pa.ssed these tests in ways that made former enemies want to become citizens that transformed pr1soners into patriots and that demonstrated values were worth defending because they produced results that justified the claims democratic societies made about human dignity and individual opportunity Giuseppe Farina d1ed in 2001 at age 83 surrounded by children grandchildren and great grandchildren who existed because American sailors had captured him in Tunisia in 1943 and because American farmers had treated him with kindness
during two years of impr1sonment that became foundation for life he built across five decades as American citizen his gravestone in Missouri includes his birth location Naples Italy and his de4th location Jefferson City Missouri documenting journey from enemy pr1soner to American citizen that represented one man’s experience of values that made America worth loving even for those who’d started as enemies
Disclaimer: This story is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.