In the earlier years of Stalag Luft six, when the camp was being
run by the military. The relationship between guards and,
and prisoners were formal, but some of the people managed to get
closer to the guards and inevitably over a period of time,
at that time they were getting cigarettes in the food parcels,
you know. And they're getting, people would send cigarettes to
their families, from their families to the prisoners. So you
could build up these and use them for barter purposes. And of
course, you could bribe a German guard to bring things in. And
this is how I think they had gathered these radio sets. They
existed certainly, before I was ever a POW and in fact what we
would have in Luft six and in Falling when we were there, you
have a daily broadcast. And the way this worked is on these
underground radios that they had, they would get a report from
the BBC, you know they get the BBC report. They'd also get the
Voice of America and things like this. And we used to have then,
cetain of the prisoners would go around from barrack block to
barrack block and read the news. And in fact, in Luft, in the BBC
at that time, you would have well known broadcasters like Al
( inaudible ) and people like that would have a very formal and
well-known way of giving the news. And we would have these
guys who would be coming around from barrack block to barrack
block, who would assume this sort of attitude and voice. And
it would almost be like hearing the BBC. And they would come
around from room to room and you would have these you would get
the daily news about half a, about half a days late. And in some
cases, you would get more news than the Germans were getting,
because they used to have what they called the OKW reports which
was the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, used to issue a daily
bulletin which would always give a distorted view as to wha twas
happening on the battle front. So we would have that, cause they
would issue that and it would be up on the notice boards. And the
Germans would produce that. So you would get the OKW report each
day, you would also get the BBC and perhaps the Voice of America
each day. So we had more news than the, the Germans guards
would have. And in fact, they would want to know how, you know,
people would have up on the wall, maps which they constructed
themselves or got out of a book, with the fronts drawn in on them
And they would want to know, how on earth you knew this, you know
How you could be up to date on where the war was taking place in
Stalingrad and places like this. And you know, you’d say, "Oh
well, that's where we're assuming it would be." But we were not
short of news.