Kein Held

  • Dates
    2023 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Locations Normandy, Bad Kissingen, Thorée-les-Pins

"Kein Held" ("No Hero") explores my grandfather Heinz Nieland’s story as a Wehrmacht soldier and Prisoner of War in France. While imprisoned, he collected over 800 poems. The book is a dialogue between past and present through images, poetry and archive.

Heinz Nieland was first deployed by the German Wehrmacht in 1941 towards the East. In his very first battle near Moscow his right arm was wounded by a granade splinter. He was sent to the military hospital and declared no longer fit for frontline use. After recovering he was deployed to France, where he served as an infantry clerk.

When the Liberation of France started in June 1944, Heinz started marching back to Germany with his unit. On the third of September they had set up a camp in Thielt near Ghent. On the morning of September 5th, Heinz was part of a team that had to explore the route to Overmeire, about 15 kilometres east of Ghent. In the small town Merelbeke, their car was shot at and Heinz jumped out. He was captured by the Belgian police and handed over to the British authorities. They brought him down the French coast to Audrieu, a small village in Normandy. During the Liberation, the Allied forces had started setting up prison camps where Heinz spent the next three years. He was held captive in four different prison camps: Audrieu, Fleury, Cherbourg and Thorée-les-Pins. Inside the prison camp of Thoreé, he served as a translator since he had picked up some French during the past years.

With the typewriter he used for his work he started to write down poetry that was brought to him by fellow prisoners. He collected over 800 poems during his imprisonment. Most of them were written by well known poets and writers. However, a few poems were originals written by fellow prisoners. Most poems are about everyday life, humour, labor and love. Another German prisoner of war bound the pages into three books in exchange for cigarettes. When Heinz was released in 1947, he brought the books back home to Bad Kissingen.

Heinz died from a heart attack in April 1971. I never got to know him. But when my now 91-year old grandmother Margot gifted me the golden ring he used to wear and told me that I was just like him, it made me curious to know who this person was. Together with the ring she also passed on Heinz poetry collection to me. She teared up when she told me the story behind the books and how Heinz used to ocassionaly read poems to her.

I never could relate to the black and white images of my grandfather as a soldier. Even less to fighting for a fascist regime. This is why it made me proud when I discovered documents stating that my great-grandfather was an anti fascist. It also added a complexity to the narrative I tried to include.

The book is my personal approach to visualize my grandfather‘s history. The pictures inside the book were taken during three journeys that I made from my hometown Bad Kissingen through Merelbeke, along the sites of the former prison camps down to Thorée-les-Pins. By combining my images and archive material with the poetry he collected, the work seeks to open up a dialogue between the past and the present.

Additional Information: I am submitting the sixth dummy of this book, which currently exists only in digital form. It includes an inlay booklet with captions and text, added at the end of the PDF. The cover will be the same as in a recent dummy, which is why I’ve uploaded it as a cover image, but haven’t included a video of me flipping through.

© Stefan Nieland - Image of Heinz Nieland laying in his bed inside the military hospital in Königgrätz. From my families archive, 1941.
i

Image of Heinz Nieland laying in his bed inside the military hospital in Königgrätz. From my families archive, 1941.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

A documentary about the Liberation of France during World War II playing on the TV of local journalist Patricia.Cherbourg, France, 23 April 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Exhibited artifacts in the Museum Memorial de Caen. Caen, France, 26 April 2024.
i

Exhibited artifacts in the Museum Memorial de Caen. Caen, France, 26 April 2024.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Two models of aircraft hanging from Patrick‘s ceiling. A Horsa Glider and a Lancester Bomber - The aircrafts used by the british during the Liberation of France. They are part of his large collection of World War II related artifcats. Longues-sur-Mer, France, 30 December 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Overgrown ditch in the outskirts of Merelbeke – the town where my grandfather was arrested by the belgian police on 5 September 1944. From them he was handed over to the british authorities and brought to France, to a prison camp in Audrieu. Merelbeke, Belgium, 26 December 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

A letter written by a comrade and friend of Heinz Nieland.In the letter he explains to my great-grandfather Hermann Nieland how my grandfather Heinz was captured.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

The entrance to the prison camp Dépôt 402 of Thorée-les-Pins, the place where Heinz was imprisoned from 15 May 1946 until his release on the 08 November 1947. Inside the camp he served as a translator and wrote down the poetry.From the archive of French historican Daniel Potron.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

An old scarecrow by the lake on the property of Peter Pattinson. He lives right next to the military training ground which during World War II used to be the prison camp. He inherited the scarecrow from the previous owner. Thorée-les-Pins, France, 27 April 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Renovation of an old wall near the former prison camp of Fleury.Fleury-sur-Orne, France, 29 December 2023
i

Renovation of an old wall near the former prison camp of Fleury.Fleury-sur-Orne, France, 29 December 2023

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Colette Pomikal poses for a portrait with the picture of her husband Werner Pomikal who already has passed away. Werner was a german prisoner of war in Fleury, in the same prison camp as my grandfather. He was put to work on a farm where he met Colette. Fleury-sur-Orne, France, 30 December 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - View on the east side of the prison camp of Thorée-les-Pins.From the archive of the french historican Daniel Potron.
i

View on the east side of the prison camp of Thorée-les-Pins.From the archive of the french historican Daniel Potron.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

A request for release from french war imprison-ment written by my great grandfather HermannNieland to the prison camp in Thorée-les-Pinson 11 December 1946.

© Stefan Nieland - Destroyed portrait of Adolf Hitler exhibited at the Museum„Le Memorial“ in Caen. Caen, France, 29 December 2023.
i

Destroyed portrait of Adolf Hitler exhibited at the Museum„Le Memorial“ in Caen. Caen, France, 29 December 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Landfill next to the military training ground where the prison camp of Thorée-les-Pins was located during World War II. Thorée-les-Pins, France, 05 January 2024.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Suburban housing development in Cherbourg. It is the exact place where the tents of the prisoners of the prison camp Dépôt 301 used to stand. When the construction company was building the base for the project they found over 4500 artefacts from the prison camp. A camera flash illuminates the rain. Cherbourg, France, 01 January 2024.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

The Second German cemetry of Thorée which was built after the first one was oversaturated. A report by the International Committee of the Red Cross describes the situation in the camp as critical. Of the approximately 20,000 prisoners, 13,000 were malnourished but able to work. The remaining 7,000 were seriously ill. Approximatly 2000 German prisoners died during their imprisonment.

© Stefan Nieland - A chapel inside an ancient tree. Allouville-Bellefosse, France, 28 December 2023.
i

A chapel inside an ancient tree. Allouville-Bellefosse, France, 28 December 2023.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

Prisoners sit next to the Fence of the Prison Camp of Thorée-les-Pins.From the archive of the French historican Daniel Potron.

© Stefan Nieland - Image from the Kein Held photography project
i

The fence of the military training ground of Thoree at night, illuminated by a green flash. The training ground used to be the Prison Camp Depot 402. Thorée-les-Pins, France, 06 January 2024.

Kein Held by Stefan Nieland

Prev Next Close