| Immediately
after the arrest, Claes, Arild and the others in the group
went into hiding. They continued to print and distribute
newspapers but avoided their previous haunts and took painstaking
precautions before contacting their families. Claes’ mother
hung a towel in the kitchen window if the coast was clear
but one day the police were waiting anyhow and they overpowered
him at the door of the apartment. He was allowed to go in
to get some other clothes and under the pretext of giving
his mother a kiss he whispered, “Ring Arild”. She did, giving
Arild an opportunity to flee to Sweden.
| Claes was taken first
to the prison at Bredvedt, and then to Møllergaten 19,
the feared Gestapo headquarters in Oslo. From the questions
and treatment he received, Claes realised that they
had no real evidence against him and, after a few weeks,
thinking that Arild would, by now, be in Sweden, he
‘gave’ his interrogators Arild’s name. After this he
was sent to the less onerous prison camp at Grini. He
soon realised that he would probably be sent to Germany
so he began to brush up on his German. The last thing
he remembers from Grini
is that the guards became more cheerful and amenable
when they heard the erroneous news that Stalingrad had
fallen to the Germans. Claes was sent to Sachsenhausen
in 1943.The first leg of the journey, from Oslo to Stettin,
was on the infamous prison ship ‘Donau’.
We talked to Claes several times in 2006 and early in
2007. |
|
Claes Berg opens the door to his Oslo apartment,
looks at his watch, and says, “You are precise”. Punctuality
is obviously important to him. It is two o’clock on a cold,
snowy day in January. Claes continues to speak in English.
I say that he can just as well speak Norwegian but no, he
prefers English. He tells me that he has lived alone in
this large apartment since his wife died many years ago.
It is his childhood home. He came here when he was seven.
The square in front of the apartment bears the name of his
father, an architect who was Oslo’s first official “Cultural
Heritage Manager.” Claes has been an active cross-country
and slalom skier, and a competitive sailor for most of his
life. He still takes long walks but admits to having slowed
down somewhat lately He shows me a photograph and tells
me proudly that his three children are just about perfect.
This gives me the opportunity to ask him if his children
know about his experiences during the war, “They know the
broad picture but I never told them all the details, partly
because they were already biased against Germany after the
occupation of Norway and I didn’t want to add to their prejudices.”
| As we sit down he opens
a box and hands me what looks like two blocks of wood,
held together by raffia through small holes on the left.
‘Claes’ and ‘9,X1.44’ – his birthday – are burned into
the wood. Inside, on stiff cardboard, are birthday greetings,
drawings, caricatures, and cartoons – all dedicated
to Claes in tiny handwriting – a fitting memento. On
one page, rather incongruously, a sketch of a well-worn
boot with a birthday greeting fastened to a lace. The
text underneath reads “GOOD LUCK FROM THOSE WHO “LÄUF”
AND… On the following page the text continues, “…from
those who are supposed to.” Above this text are the
names of 8 Englishmen. Claes explains that within the
camp, the Germans had constructed several paths which
had surfaces of various materials. |
|
 |
Prisoners,
including these Englishmen, were made to walk up and
down these paths wearing different types of boots –
to test of the boots’ quality. Claes continues, “It
was a form of punishment, they walked and walked for
hours at a time with little sustenance. They lived in
another part of the camp but came to me to get extra
food. The writing in the book made it clear that without
the additional rations they would not have lasted very
long but Claes admits that his efforts had been in vain,
“these particular prisoners were executed by the Germans
towards the end of the war.” |
“There was also a Russian prisoner who was
especially ill-treated even though the Germans didn’t know
that his father was a high-ranking communist leader in Moscow.
The father must have been important because when the camps
were liberated, he managed to get his son sent straight
to Moscow. All the other Russian prisoners were shipped
off to Siberia. I gave him extra bread and he is still alive
and well and living in Russia. I visited him after the war
and he came to Norway. His biggest surprise here was that
for the first 10 days he didn’t see a single policeman.
Finally we had to seek one out in Bergen just to convince
him that we really did have a police force in Norway.”
I ask how he could give them extra food and he replies,
“Well I was lucky. From an early date I got food parcels
from Sweden. It was a complicated piece of luck. First my
father had tried to send parcels from Norway but to no avail.
I had an aunt in Stockholm. She tried to send parcels through
regular channels but failed. However, she knew the owner
of one of Sweden’s large industrial companies – a company
that had contracts to deliver products to Germany. She approached
the owner, a friend of hers, with the problem and he promised
to help. Getting the Germans to accept ‘just small packages’,
as part of the larger shipments of goods, was not easy but
with a bit of bravado and hint of industrial blackmail,
the friend prevailed.”
Claes says that he would never forget the first parcel that
arrived: “…a higher ranking officer than we normally saw
around our huts came to me followed by an orderly carrying
a package. I was told to open it and inside was heaven:
chocolate, butter, cakes, ‘Lucky Strike’ cigarettes … I
had to sign for each item and was told to write and thank
the relative who had sent the package – typical German thoroughness.”
Claes smiles and adds that from then on he got a parcel
about every other month – and that the same routine was
followed each time.
In one letter home he had complained about the cold and
in a parcel a few weeks later he found a Swedish military
overcoat. The German officer and orderly, as usual, were
in attendance and when they saw Claes in the overcoat they
almost jumped to attention. “You are a Naval Admiral,” the
officer exclaimed. Claes told them that he was far too young
to be an admiral and that anyhow, he was a civilian. “But
they didn’t seem to believe me and I’m convinced that from
that day they treated me with a little more respect.” In
the book, ‘Gestapo henter deg om natten’ (The Gestapo comes
for you at night), the author tells how, one day, Claes
managed to get out of his cell at Møllergaten 19 for a few
hours. The alarm system had broken down in one of the cell
blocks and the Germans had gone from cell to cell asking
if anyone was an electrician. Claes was an engineer and
not an electrician but he volunteered anyhow– and in fact,
he fixed the problem. I suggested to Claes that maybe he
had used the same technique to land his job in the motor
repair workshop. “Well, not exactly, but my electrical skills
came in very handy there.” he replied.
The motor repair workshop, where vehicles of all types,
from motorcycles to tanks, were brought in for repair, was
one of the satellites to the main camp. One day a German
guard brought in a radio that didn’t work and asked around
if anyone could repair it. Claes said he would try – and
if he succeeded the price would be an extra ration of bread.
The guard accepted, Claes fixed the radio and got his extra
bread. This was the start of a regular ‘business’. Since
there were no German civilian or military technicians in
the neighbourhood, the word soon spread that Claes was the
‘radio fixer’ – and there was no shortage of faulty radios.
“Fixing radios was the source of the extra rations that
I could give, for example, to the Englishmen. There were
those in my hut who thought I should share the extra food
with them but we were in much better shape than many others
in the camp.” A side benefit of the ‘business’ was that
Claes always had a radio hidden away so that he could keep
abreast of the war news.
At the workshop, damaged vehicles came in on numbered railway
flatbeds. When the trains arrived, Claes and his crew were
given a list of jobs to be done, each ‘job’ referring to
a flatbed. On one occasion ‘the job’ was to repair something
in a tank. He told his partner to climb aboard and try to
get the engine started. Claes went into the turret where
he found ammunition for the machine guns and the turret
gun. The vehicle began to shake as the motor started up
and they drove the half-track onto the ground. Claes remembers
sitting in the turret with the guns and ammunition around
him, and thinking that he could simply start moving and
drive right out of the workshop, through the town into the
countryside and away: “Nobody could have stopped me, there
was no heavy artillery nearby, and small arms fire couldn’t
penetrate the armour. The feeling of power was almost intoxicating
– of course I did nothing – even in an armoured vehicle
I couldn’t get far without food or money” he concluded.
Radio repair was not the only activity in which Claes had
to use a certain amount of bluff. The German in charge of
the workshop, – not a very bright specimen according to
Claes – had to write regular reports and, like many other
Germans at that time, he could speak German better than
he could write it. One day Claes saw a report that the supervisor
was writing and he mentioned casually that it contained
several mistakes. The supervisor asked to be shown the errors
and corrected them without comment. The next week he asked
Claes to read through the report he had just written and
to correct any errors. “After a while I was writing the
reports myself.” Claes smiles at the thought and adds, “Of
course my German was really not all that good so I had to
swot up on the grammar in the evenings.”
As a result of his ‘teaching’ post, Claes was again able
to get extra food and special favours from the supervisor,
for both himself and his crew: The situation got even better
when, one day while the supervisor was absent from the workshop
for a couple of hours, the ‘big brass’ of the camp arrived
for an unexpected inspection The supervisor had a bad habit
of leaving his service revolver and belt on his desk during
working hours. He had done so on this day and Claes knew
that if the inspection team found the revolver, the supervisor
would be in serious trouble. Claes finished the story: “So
I went into his office and quickly put the belt and revolver
in a drawer. Just as the inspection was ending the supervisor
returned. He literally turned white when he saw the high-ranking
officers and looked nervously into his office. When the
officers had left the supervisor asked what had happened
to his revolver. I took him into his office and opened the
drawer. After that he practically lived in my pocket.”
 |
Claes explains that the Norwegians
and Danes in the camp were a special group of prisoners,
mostly educated, professional, or training to be professionals;
doctors, teachers, lawyers. They quickly became leaders,
trusted by both guards and guarded. They were trusted
to the extent of being sent to other satellite camps,
he gave an example: “A group of us were once sent to
do some repairs at a camp on the other side of Berlin.
|
There were no trucks or cars
available so we had to use local trains and busses. We wore
our normal prison outfits and so we stuck out like sore
thumbs among the civilians. What amazed me was the way most
of the locals looked at us, some of them even said: ‘How
could you be so stupid as to work against Hitler?’ We were
looking forward to working at the other camp because we
heard there were some females there – but we should have
known better – the females were German guards, we got no
help, little food and had to live by our wits most of the
time.” Another of Claes’ friends was put in charge of an
aircraft factory. “He lived an entirely different life to
the rest of us” said Claes.
Just when I felt that Claes’ ‘wits’ had given him almost
a ‘charmed’ life in this dreadful camp, his face clouds
and he tells me about a couple of episode that were the
stuff of nightmares: “I was one of the few who entered a
gas chamber and lived to tell.” The prisoners who worked
around the gas chambers, “Sonderkommandos” (Special Groups),
usually Polish Jews, were themselves eliminated after a
few months, either because they were too weak to continue
or because the SS liquidated them – not wanting any survivors
who knew about the ‘death camps.’ Again Claes was called
upon to fix an electrical problem. The SS guard who accompanied
him wouldn’t enter the gas chamber itself, but waited outside.
Claes remembers: “The smell of gas hung in the air. The
atmosphere was indescribable. It was dim, almost dark. I
fixed the problem and got out as quickly as possible. Only
when I got back to my hut did I realise that I might be
in danger because of the SS ‘no survivor’ policy.”
“The second episode was just before liberation, when morale
was low and sickness and death due to ill-treatment and
malnutrition were at their highest. Each morning a special
group of prisoners went around the barracks searching for
and removing the bodies of those who had died in the night.
I had a friend who, though not seriously ill, had difficulty
in getting up and walking around. He lived in another hut
and I went there one morning to see how he was but found
that he had been taken away by the ‘body collectors’. ‘He
wasn’t dead,’ one of the roommates said, ‘but the collectors
insisted that he wouldn’t last another day.’ I rushed to
the building where the bodies were placed after collection
and found rows upon rows of corpses, eight to ten high.
In one of the piles I saw my friend – his eyes were flickering
and fingers moving”. Claes pointed this out to the guard
and asked if he could remove the live body. But no, the
bodies had been counted and if one was taken out it must
be replaced – or the numbers wouldn’t add up. Finding a
replacement body in a death camp was not difficult – and
the switch was made.
The next day Claes’ friend was on his way back home thanks
to Folke Bernadotte’s ‘White Buses.’ Claes himself followed
soon afterwards and he tells of one final incident: “We
had to change out of our prison garb and we were given strict
orders not to take these with us. I was on a bus that stopped
on the way to the exit and almost without thinking I got
out, ducked into a hut, found a prison suit, and stuck it
under my jacket. Claes was one of 2500 Norwegians in the
camp when the buses arrived. He says, “Count Bernadotte
was not thanked enough for his contribution to the release
of Scandinavian prisoners.” Claes repeated this several
times at a later meeting and related how Bernadotte had
worked so hard and finally managed to persuade Himmler to
allow the repatriation.
After some months of convalescence Claes began to take up
the threads of his life again. His brother Knut, an art
historian, had been sent to Germany to trace articles stolen
by the Germans during the occupation. Most of the items
were in the ‘Art ‘category but the list also included an
entire factory! Knut could handle the art but had no technical
knowledge and as Norway couldn’t afford to send an engineer,
he suggested that, provided the government would pay for
the transport, Claes would come and work for nothing: “A
welcome break and a soft re-entry to civilian life.” as
Claes put it. Yes, they found the factory.
The war had interrupted Claes’ education but he soon caught
up and enrolled at Grenoble University to study engineering.
“In later years my wife didn’t like me saying this,” he
said, “but the years in Grenoble were the best years of
my life.” After 4 years he came away from Grenoble with
a lifelong passion for everything French; the food, the
language, the people, and the country. Back in Norway he
started working for a small engineering-import business
that entailed much travelling. On his travels he found that
many of the top managers in business had been either imprisoned
or active in the resistance movement. The same was true
of many government officials and politicians: the post-war
Prime Ministers Einar Gerhardsen and Trygve Bratteli (who
had lain in the bunk above Claes at one time) had both been
incarcerated in Sachsenhausen. I suggested that perhaps
their experiences and sufferings had hardened and strengthened
them and that Norway had rewarded them with its trust –
in politics and in business. He agreed to a certain extent
but reminded me that there had been 20,000 members of Quisling’s
National Socialist party during the war and that countless
numbers of Norwegians profited from the war. In a strong
voice he says, “We must never forget what happened. Next
month I am going to a local school to tell a class of fifteen
year olds about my experiences before they go on a guided
tour to some of the concentration camps in Poland and Germany.
I have done this before and I must admit that the students
listened attentively. One of the teachers said afterwards
that she had never before had pupils who listened so intensely
and silently.”
Claes was obviously tired by now so I said we should take
a break. He said that I hadn’t asked many questions but
I explained that, like the pupils, all I had to do was listen
intensely and silently.
From Claes
Berg’s Birthday Book
 |
Claes Berg – Epilogue
In December 2006 I visited Claes to return some photographs.
His youngest son, one of his grandchildren and his brother
were there. The adults had just started watching a film
about the artists’ colony at Holmsbu, a small community
on the coast about 60 kilometers from Oslo. I stayed to
watch – the main character in the colony, Henrik Sørensen
had played his part in the Resistance movement – and I had
recently met his son at the Art Gallery in Holmsbu. Claes
was not feeling too good that day but was obviously happy
to have some of his family close by. They were going for
a short walk before leaving for a family dinner at Claes’s
daughter Jannike.
 |
At the end of January
2007 I telephoned Claes and told him that we would be
leaving for a month in Florida the next day. We agreed
to meet again for another chat on our return.
On Feb 2nd came an e-mail from Oslo with the sad news
that Claes Berg had died. He had fought hard to hold
onto life but I’m sure he did not fear death. Perhaps
he had seen too much of it in those terrible years of
his youth. His best friend, Arild, once told me that
Claes was completely fearless: swishing down a steep
slope on skis, making a tricky tack in a regatta, reaching
a tough business decision. He remained so to the end.
|
| I had written
to Jannike before leaving for Florida, asking some questions
about her father. What follows is mostly based on her
comments – about things that Claes mentioned only superficially
during our several meetings.Arno Berg, a young architect,
came to Norway from Sweden to study the ancient buildings
at the Norwegian Folk Museum. Like many men before (and
after) him, he found more than timbers and joints to
interest him in Norway: he met his future wife and decided
to settle in Oslo. This was an auspicious decision.
Arno Berg became a significant figure in Oslo’s cultural
life and in 1927 he was appointed director of ‘Selskabet
for Oslo Byes Vel’ (The Company for the Preservation
of Oslo). In 1956, when the City Council decided to
establish the position of City Heritage Director, it
seemed natural to choose Arno Berg to fill the post.
|
|
The Berg family, now including two boys
Claes and Knut, was intimately connected with the artistic
and cultural life in Oslo. Summer holidays were often spent
at Holmsbu where the cultural life continued. The painter
Oluf Wold Torne had ‘discovered’ Holmsbu in 1911 and many
other artists and writers were attracted there by the tranquil
fjord, the rounded, red, rocks and the sparkling light.
By the time Henrik Sørensen bought a house there in 1929
Holmsbu had become one of the more important artists’ colonies
in Scandinavia.
 |
This was an inspiring atmosphere for
the Berg family. Among Claes’ papers I found a newspaper
cutting showing a group of boys at Holmsbu: Claes, Sven
Oluf - Henrik Sørensen’s son – and 4 others, standing
proudly around a model moon rocket. An inspiring atmosphere
indeed – Sven Oluf became an Atomic Energy professor
– was he the ‘brain’ behind the rocket?
The impression was an almost bohemian existence. Jannike
wrote: “Making money was not on my grand-parents agenda
as opposed to Claes’ goal in life.” After Graduating
in Electrical Engineering from the University of Grenoble
in 1949 Claes went to Africa to work for a Belgian engineering
company involved in construction work. He spent a couple
of years there and then 18 months in Morocco before
working in the Belgian Congo where he was involved in
building houses. On the way home he flew across Africa,
visited Egypt to see the Pyramids and Greece to see
the Acropolis. |
Claes never mentioned any of this to us
when we were talking freely at home but, as Jannike says:
“When we were young, he actually talked more about his experiences
in Africa than Sachsenhausen!” We had heard from Arild that
Claes had enjoyed his experiences in Africa and Jannike
confirmed that – “he had a good time in Africa during the
French and Belgian colonial times.” After working for an
uncle who had a company representing a large Luxembourg
concern, Claes started his own company in the early fifties.
He became the Norwegian representative for Turtle Wax –
a name that was synonymous with car polish in the 50’s and
60’s – and probably still is. (Yesterday, driving to Oslo
from Asker, a shining, strikingly coloured car pulled out
in front of us from a gas station – emblazoned over the
whole body – Turtle Wax!). Claes also introduced Telma Brakes
to Norway. This was a supplementary brake system for large
trucks and busses that Claes had to both sell and install.
Probably because of his connections with the Luxembourg
concern Claes was the Consul-General for Luxembourg from
1977 to 1997 and as a Francophile it was natural for him
to establish a branch of his company in Paris. One of his
successes there was importing motor saws for the lumber
industry. After a few years the commuting between Oslo and
Paris became too much and he sold the French company. The
man who bought it remains a good friend – he had telephoned
to Claes just a couple of days before I talked to him in
January. The Norwegian company continues to thrive in the
hands of Claes’ son Arno. Claes retired many years ago but
he had an office in the company, made regular visits there
until the summer of 2006 and attended the Christmas party
in December.
I had asked Jannike if there were any special highlights
in Claes’ business or private life and here’s what she wrote:
“Any highlights? On the negative side it was our mother’s
illness. She married Claes young, had three children and
discovered that she was manic depressive. This influenced
their life tremendously but Claes was supportive until she
died 30 years later. On the positive side, I think his highlights
have been his three children and seeing us succeed in life,
his own business and material success, which have given
him the opportunity to travel, ski, sail, have a house in
France etc. There are also his life-long friends, among
them Arild, whom he met when they started first grade in
1928 at Uranienborg school. They are still very close, so
their friendship reaches back almost 80 years. Claes has
a big and very close-knit family and I feel that is one
of his proudest contributions. He keeps referring to this
and I think it is very important for him to know now, when
his life is coming to an end, that he is leaving behind
a big and happy family – the Berg Circus, as a French friend
from University called it in the early 1950’s. The family
atmosphere is still the same: Claes and his brother Knut,
Knut’s wife Marcia, their six kids, in-laws and grandchildren.”
I also asked how Claes had been at home, thinking that,
after his wartime experiences, with a wife who was ill,
and a demanding job, raising a family may have been difficult
for him. Not at all:
“How Claes was at home? He was a very good father for us,
always interested in what we were doing, taking us out skiing,
sailing and travelling. We went with him to ski in France
and spent the summers in Spain. He was a globetrotter, fluent
in several languages, very outgoing, curious and always
active, much ahead of his time. Our friends became his friends.
He has always encouraged us and supported us in sports,
school and to get a good education and use our talents.
He has always been very liberal.”
No wonder that one of the first things Claes had shown me
was a photograph – “These are my children” he said, “They
are just about perfect.”
Asker April 2007
Prison Regulations
- Grini
|
|