Günter Grass: How I Spent the War
        In 1943, when I was a fifteen-year-old schoolboy in Danzig,  volunteered for active duty. When  Why? Since I do not know the exact  date and cannot recall the by the  unstable climate of the war, or list  its hot spots from the Arctic to the  Caucasus, all I can do for now is  string together the circumstances  that probably triggered and  nourished my decision to enlist. No  mitigating epithets allowed. What  did cannot be put down to youthful folly. No pressure from above. No  did I feel the need to assuage a sense of guilt, at, say, doubting the  Führer’s infallibility, with my zeal  to volunteer.
It happened while I was serving in the Luftwaffe auxiliary—a force made up of boys too young to be conscripts, who were deployed to defend Germany in its air war. The service was not voluntary but compulsory then for boys of my age, though we experienced it as a liberation from our school routine and accepted its not very taxing drills. Rabidly pubescent, we considered ourselves the mainstays of the home front. The Kaiserhafen battery became our second home. At first there were attempts to keep school going, but, as classes were too often interrupted by field exercises, the mostly frail, elderly teachers refused to travel the wearisome dirt road to our battery....
            
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        It happened while I was serving in the Luftwaffe auxiliary—a force made up of boys too young to be conscripts, who were deployed to defend Germany in its air war. The service was not voluntary but compulsory then for boys of my age, though we experienced it as a liberation from our school routine and accepted its not very taxing drills. Rabidly pubescent, we considered ourselves the mainstays of the home front. The Kaiserhafen battery became our second home. At first there were attempts to keep school going, but, as classes were too often interrupted by field exercises, the mostly frail, elderly teachers refused to travel the wearisome dirt road to our battery....
