“You Mean We Can Just Walk?” — German POWs Froze When They Saw Canada’s Camps Had No Fences

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The Power of an Open Road: A New Understanding of Freedom and Control

The Arrival: No Fences, No Control

The scene unfolded one afternoon when German prisoners were brought to a seemingly ordinary Canadian prison camp. The prisoners had been transported via a long, grueling train ride across continents, and they were expecting a brutal reception. As the doors to the cattle car slid open and they stepped onto the unfamiliar soil, they were met with a sight they had not anticipated: a large, open area with no fences, no watchtowers, and no guards barring their escape.

Otto Weiss, a former corporal from Hamburg, was the first to notice the absence of a fence. His boots hit the dirt as he jumped down from the train, scanning the area. He looked for the familiar signs of a military camp—barbed wire, guard dogs, watchtowers—but none of those things appeared. There were low wooden barracks, a cookhouse, a medical hut, and firewood stacked high in sheds. But most shockingly, there was no fence, no physical barrier to control their movement.

As Otto glanced around, another prisoner approached and asked, “What is it?” Otto, still processing the surreal scene, could only point at the land around them. “Where is the camp?” the other man asked. “This is the camp,” came the response. The words seemed to ripple through the group, sparking confusion and disbelief. This wasn’t the kind of prison they had imagined. There was no wall, no separation, no confinement.

This unexpected freedom caused a nervous tension to settle over the group. The idea that they were in a place where they could simply walk away, without any immediate consequences, was something they could not quite comprehend. It was both liberating and terrifying.

A Different Kind of Control

As the days passed, the German prisoners adjusted to their new surroundings, but the absence of fences continued to unsettle them. They were given work assignments: cutting timber, repairing roads, and helping on nearby farms. Guards were present, but their presence was casual and non-threatening. Many carried rifles slung over their shoulders but spoke with ordinary, conversational tones. The prisoners were not shouted at or threatened. They were treated like regular workers, albeit under supervision.

The guards would watch the prisoners as they worked, but they did not rush or intimidate. Instead, there was an unusual calmness to the entire setup. The prisoners began to realize that they were not being treated like typical prisoners. There was no constant fear of punishment hanging over them, no daily reminders of their confinement.

One afternoon, as Otto and several others were assigned to load sacks of grain, Deer, another prisoner, looked out at the open land stretching before them. “You see that?” he asked Otto, pointing to the trees in the distance. “We could be in those trees.”

The idea of simply walking away was tantalizing. There were no guards standing in their way, no fences to stop them. But despite the initial temptation, Otto knew that running was not as simple as it seemed. The terrain was foreign, the winter cold was brutal, and they had no resources—no maps, no food, and no allies to help them. Even if they managed to evade capture for a day or two, they would be lost in an unfamiliar land.

This reality was reinforced by the news that another prisoner had tried to escape. He had wandered off into the woods, but he didn’t get far. He was caught when he tried to buy food with German coins at a local store. The idea of running became more distant, as the prisoners realized the harsh conditions that awaited them outside the camp. They were trapped not by physical barriers but by their lack of resources, knowledge, and support.

The Absence of the Fence: A New Kind of Prison

What Otto and the other prisoners began to understand over time was that the absence of a fence was not a form of freedom at all. It was a far more sophisticated form of control. The camp was not designed to hold them with physical barriers; instead, it held them with psychological barriers. The idea that they could walk away was far more unsettling than the idea of being confined.

In a conversation with France, another prisoner, Otto questioned the camp’s lack of fences. France, always a more reflective man, explained, “It’s worse than that. They don’t need to frighten us with fences.” He tapped the side of his head. “The fence is here,” he said, referring to the psychological control that the camp’s design imposed on them. The prisoners were being held not by walls or gates but by their own minds.

This idea of “mental imprisonment” began to take root in the minds of the prisoners. The lack of a fence made them question their own desire to escape. It was not the physical barriers that held them; it was the realization that they had nowhere to go and no way to survive outside the camp. They were not free; they were simply bound by their circumstances.

The Prisoners’ Growing Awareness

As the weeks passed, the prisoners slowly began to settle into their new routine. They worked, ate, and interacted with the guards, but they were always aware of the open land around them. It was a constant reminder of the fine line between freedom and imprisonment. There were no walls to stop them, but there were also no easy answers about what awaited them outside.

One day, after chapel, Otto stood outside the barracks with France, watching the smoke rise from the cookhouse chimney. “You know why there are no fences?” France asked Otto. Otto laughed dryly, “Because no one gets far.” France smiled faintly. “That, too,” he said. “But mostly because the fence is not here,” he continued, tapping the side of his head. “It’s here,” he said, pointing to the open land. “In the distance, in the language, in the winter, in the knowledge that a man cannot cross a continent on pride.”

France’s words began to sink in for Otto. The lack of physical barriers wasn’t about freedom at all; it was about making the prisoners feel psychologically trapped. The absence of a fence forced the prisoners to think, to confront their own desires for escape, and to realize that the real prison was not made of barbed wire but of their own limitations and fears.

The Final Realization: Freedom vs. Escape

As the prisoners continued their daily routines, the lack of fences became less of a topic of conversation, but it never truly left their minds. New prisoners, arriving by train, would always step off the train and look for the familiar signs of confinement: the fences, the walls, the watchtowers. When they didn’t find them, they were met with silence and confusion, the same stunned disbelief that Otto and the others had felt when they first arrived.

Years later, after the war had ended and Otto had returned home, he would reflect on his time in the camp. The lack of a fence would remain one of the most vivid memories of his captivity. It wasn’t just the physical absence of barriers that had shaped his experience—it was the psychological effect it had on him and the other prisoners. The camp had not needed a fence to keep them in; it had used the open land to keep them bound, forcing them to confront their own limitations and fears.

In the end, Otto realized that freedom was not the same as escape. Freedom was not about being able to walk away; it was about understanding the true nature of captivity and what it means to be truly free. The absence of a fence was a powerful metaphor for the struggle between freedom and control, between the visible and the invisible barriers that shape our lives.

And so, Otto carried those lessons with him for the rest of his life, understanding that the real prison is not always the one we can see, but the one we carry in our minds. The journey to freedom is not just about escaping physical barriers; it’s about breaking free from the mental and emotional walls that confine us.