CHB Mail

Soldier shares his story

‘It’s crazy killing a human being,’ says WWII veteran

- Michaela Gower

For World War II Veteran and former prisoner of war Walter Malcolm, Anzac Day is about much more than the parades. One of two surviving WWII veterans in Central Hawke’s Bay, the other being Ken Scheele, Walter now spends his days at home, making the most of the sunshine and his family.

The 102-year-old is no longer able to attend the Anzac Day services. Neverthele­ss, he finds solace in the fact he served in the New Zealand Army and is here to tell his story.

“To go through and still survive, you could say it’s a miracle.”

However, Malcolm saw both the best and the worst of humanity when he was captured by German soldiers and taken as a prisoner of war (POW) on December 3, 1943 and transporte­d by rail in cattle waggons to Moosburg, Germany.

“A chap came and he was on the floor — he had a machine gun, and if he had pulled the trigger, he would have wiped most of us out. Instead of that, he told us to come out and drop our weapons.”

He described the feeling of being a prisoner as being “at a disadvanta­ge” and through his experience he survived many nearmisses: “You lost count of the times you could have been wiped out.”

“We were put into the hands of a real nasty piece of work. He was an SS officer and he was immaculate and dressed to perfection, and he said,

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‘We are going to get you up to Germany and you are going to work for the fatherland’.”

As a POW, he delivered beer, something he found himself forever grateful for, as many of his comrades were stuck back at the camps and became “wire-happy”.

“They had been pushed around for so long, it had the effect that they had lost their way.”

There were moments when he found a version of peace in the form of a photograph of his sweetheart, Hastings woman Peggy White, as he shared tender moments with German soldiers.

“They were very decent chaps — here we are [at the camps] swapping photos of our sweetheart­s, our wives and precious families.”

He later went on to marry White and have three sons and a daughter.

Many times on the front line when faced with the enemy, he had to act out of instinct and carry out what he was trained to do — “getting rid of the other fella”.

“There is nothing you can do about it, and you are confronted with a situation — it’s either you or him, and I’m afraid you don’t hesitate. It’s crazy, isn’t it, killing a human being?”

He said it was important to commemorat­e Anzac Day because war is such a “horrible business”.

Walter spent Anzac Day with family.

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 ?? Photos / Warren Buckland ?? Left: Walter Malcolm said he missed New Zealand food while fighting overseas. Top: Malcolm’s berthing card from when he fought in World War II. Above: Malcolm holds a photograph of friend Nick Paton and himself; adjacent to him, a photograph of his wife Peggy White can be seen on the table.
Photos / Warren Buckland Left: Walter Malcolm said he missed New Zealand food while fighting overseas. Top: Malcolm’s berthing card from when he fought in World War II. Above: Malcolm holds a photograph of friend Nick Paton and himself; adjacent to him, a photograph of his wife Peggy White can be seen on the table.

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