Posted by : Robert Child Sunday


Although the title of this article is provocative, I assure you that story you are about to read is absolutely true and I want to thank Norman Lichtenfeld for bringing it to my attention.
Among the greatest "unknown stories" from WWII is that of the Wereth 11. Shortly after the outbreak of Hitler's Ardennes Offensive or Battle of The Bulge in 1944, members of the all-black 333rd Artillery Battalion were just eleven miles behind the front lines. With the rapid advance of the Germans the 333rd was ordered to withdraw further west but C and Service Battery were ordered to stay behind to give covering fire to the 106th Infantry Division.

On Dec 17th the 333rd were overrun with most killed or captured. The remnants of the unit were ordered to Bastogne and incorporated into its sister unit the 969th Field Artillery Battalion. Both units provided fire support for the 101st Airborne Division in the Siege of Bastogne, subsequently being awarded the Presidential Unit Citation.

11 soldiers, however, from the 333rd were separated from the unit shortly after they were overrun by the Germans. These men wound up in the little Belgian hamlet of Wereth, just 25 kilometers southwest of Malmedy, Belgium, site of another much more well known WWII atrocity.

At about 3 pm on Dec 16, 1944, the 11 men approached the first house in the nine-house hamlet of Wereth, owned by Mathius Langer. A friend of the Langer's was also present. The men were cold, hungry, and exhausted after walking cross-country through the deep snow. They had two rifles between them. The Langer family welcomed them and gave them food. But this small part of Belgium did not necessarily welcome Americans as “Liberators.” This area had been part of Germany before the First World War and many of its citizens still saw themselves as Germans and not Belgians.



Word leaked out from a Nazi sympathizer in the area that the men had been sheltered and were hiding in the Langer home. When the SS troops approached the house about 4 pm that day, the eleven Americans surrendered quickly, without resistance. The Americans were made to sit on the road, in the cold, until dark. The Germans then marched them down the road and gunfire was heard in the night. In the morning, villagers saw the bodies of the men in a ditch at the corner of a cow pasture. Because they were afraid that the Germans might return, they did not touch the dead soldiers. The snow covered the bodies and they remained entombed in the snow until January when villagers directed members of the 99th Div. I&R platoon to the site.

In the official US Army report it was revealed that the men had been brutalized, with broken legs, bayonet wounds to the head, and fingers cut off. And It was apparent that one man was killed as he tried to bandage a comrade's wounds.

In 2001, three Belgium citizens embarked on the task of creating a fitting memorial to these men and additionally to honor all Black GI’s of World War II. With the help of Norman Lichtenfeld, whose father fought and was captured in the Battle of the Bulge, a grassroots publicity and fund-raising endeavor was begun. The land was purchased and a fitting memorial was created There are now road signs indicating the location of the memorial, and the Belgium Tourist Bureau lists it in the 60th Anniversary “Battle of the Bulge” brochures. The dedication of the memorial was held in 2004 in an impressive military ceremony.

It is believed that this is the only memorial to Black G.I.s, and their units, of World War II in Europe. Norman's goal is to make the Wereth 11 and all Black G.I.’s “visible” to all Americans and to history. They, like so many others, paid the ultimate price for our freedom. Please visit his site www.wereth.org where you can learn more about this dark and virtually unknown chapter from WWII.

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6 Responses so far.

  1. God bless my Brother's in Arms, and their families! Jimmie Ross, Viet Nam Veteran, 1st air Cav Div

    sept 66 to sept 67 (jimmieross@sbcglobal.net

  2. Unknown says:

    Hi Robert,

    Did you know that Wereth 11 won the best documentary award at the Philadelphia International Film Festival this June?

    I was at the awards ceremony and one of the board members said some wonderful things about the film.

    Congratulations!

    Lisa Gage

  3. Unknown says:

    Hi Robert,

    Did you know that Wereth 11 won Best Documentary Award at 35th Annual Philadelphia International film festival in June?

    The presenter said some wonderful things about the movie and the story it told.

    Congratulations!

  4. Unknown says:

    Hi Robert,

    Did you know that Wereth 11 won the best documentary award at the Philadelphia International Film Festival this June?

    I was at the awards ceremony and one of the board members said some wonderful things about the film.

    Congratulations!

    Lisa Gage

  5. Lisa, I did know of the award and everyone on our team was honored to receive it! Thanks for your comment. The film was also just nominated for an Emmy® Award.

  6. Unknown says:

    Unfortunately, it injects too much "Hollywood" fiction into the storyline. For example, the 333rd was NOT outnumbered 10 to 1. The problem was that the 333rd faced a highly trained German force.

    It's good that this story is coming to light though, so that the world can see what those poor eleven soldiers went through.

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