Available Formats
Dangerous Days: A Digger's Great Escape
By (Author) Ernest Brough
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd
1st November 2010
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Prisoners of war
Second World War
Modern warfare
940.548194
Paperback
346
Width 130mm, Height 200mm, Spine 22mm
386g
'We made our break on the night of April 8, 1944. A few weeks before there had been a mass escape of POWs and the countryside was crawling with Germans. But we didn't know anything about it, which was just as well ...' After joining up alongside his mates from country Victoria, at 22 Ern Brough fought and was wounded at Tobruk and at El Alamein in World War II. But neither he nor his humanity died. One morning during the brutal Allied offensive against Rommel in October 1942, he piggybacked a badly wounded enemy soldier back to German lines under heavy fire. Three hours later, the tanks came and Brough was taken prisoner. On Good Friday, 1944, Brough and two others escaped from an Austrian POW camp and embarked on a desperate flight through Slovenia and Croatia to Bosnia. Travelling by night, using only the moon, a stolen map and a handmade compass to guide themselves, they swam icy rivers, traversed snowy mountain passes, hid in ditches and were nearly caught countless times, escaping once by pretending to be Germans. This is the story of that incredible journey, the exploits that earned Brough the Military Medal, and the actions at home that have since made him a local hero.
In World War II Brough fought and was wounded at Tobruk and at El Alamein. Several hours after piggy-backing a wounded German soldier back to his lines, he was taken prisoner. He staged a daring escape from Stalag 18A with two others through Slovenia to Bosnia. Today he lives in Geelong.