The Kinder Side of World War II

World War II was one if not the darkest era in history, Unprecedented death and destruction, and genocide. However, there were lighter moments during the six years of war.

The photograph above is of French children playing with the U.S. mascot in Normandy. An American soldier and his pet fox made friends with two small French children at Isigny, from which the Germans were driven on 10 June 1944. The fox, caught by the soldier before he left England to take part in the Battle of Normandy, became the mascot of a U.S. engineering unit.

Two American airborne soldiers, Private Edward Howard, Springfield 111, and Sergeant Micheal T. Stankiweicz, Scranton, Pa., comfort a frightened white rabbit they found on the road outside a French village a few hours after bitter fighting.

Dutch children entertain with dances in national costume on the grounds of meated Hoensbroek Castle, the Netherlands, for U.S. soldiers stationed in the Area. Roman Catholic nuns took care of 145 children living in the castle. The children, mostly around three years old, expressed with dances and games their appreciation for the kindness of American soldiers who visited them.

An American military policeman gives instructions to French nuns and civilians who are helping the U.S. Army Medical Corps care for casualties in Normandy. American hospital installations behind the front lines and in front-line villages were operating with surgical teams that included fully trained neurologists, orthopaedic surgeons, psychiatrists, general practitioners, nurses, medical orderlies and local civilian help.

source

https://www.niod.nl/en/collections/image-bank-ww2

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