Today is the annual day for single dogs to eat dog food. Love is precious and dog food is even more expensive. Now love is full of materialization, and in the war-torn era, love is just a simple encounter that can be entrusted to life. Just as many people were moved by the classic film "Battlefield Romance" and understood that no matter how difficult the environment is, it is romantic and poetic. Of course, the real war environment is much crueler than in the movie. Today, "The Conqueror of the Ocean" will take you to interpret love in the war.
Ocean Conquerors Interpret Love Meeting in War
Love regardless of identity
The two Ocean Conquers kissed goodbye affectionately on both sides of the fence of the prisoner-of-war camp
Photos of the two conquerors in the ocean in their later years
With war, there will be prisoners of war. Many countries issued bills prohibiting the intermarriage of their own people with prisoners of war during World War II. However, love always makes people so caught off guard. In love, men and women have no nationality or identity. There is such a couple in the UK. Her husband Heinz is a German prisoner of war, while his wife Joan is a British. They met and fell in love in the prisoner of war camp. The two often dated secretly. Heinz is often confined to the spotlight because of dates. Even the wedding night was not spent intact together. Joan was also full of eyes and despised because of others' prejudice. Although there were many difficulties, their love never retreated because of it. Instead, they cherished each other more. Now the two are living together in England with a lot of children and grandchildren.
Love across time
The two people who met 68 years later
In addition to being hindered by identity differences, love in the war is also a love that travels through life and death. Many battlefield couples are together for a short time because the war has to be separated, and some have no news since then. The 20-year-old British Lieutenant Harold Pettinger fell in love with the beautiful girl Dorothy Eastwood, who was 18 years old at the time, on a cruise ship heading to South Africa. However, after the cruise ship arrived in Cape Town, South Africa, since Harold had to go to the Middle East to fight, Dorothy would live in Zimbabwe, the two had no choice but to say goodbye in a hurry. When the two broke up, they left each other's address, but they knew in their hearts that it was unlikely that they would see each other again in the future. After the war, they had each other's lives. However, after 68 years, the two contacted each other due to World War II commemoration activities, and World War II couples Harold and Dorothy miraculously reunited.
Love in concentration camp
The real Alexander Pechelsky of the Ocean Conqueror
In addition to the battlefield, the closest thing to death is in the concentration camp, and love is also born in such a place of death. The story takes place between a Polish Jewish girl and a prisoner of war in the Soviet Red Army, who once made a white shirt and gave it to Pechelsky. Later, Pechelsky andThe refugees successfully organized a prison escape and escaped from the concentration camp. The two were also separated while running away. After the war, many people, including Pechelsky, were looking for her whereabouts, but they were unable to find her. The white shirt she gave to Pechersky was collected by the History Museum.
Perhaps the people you love are separated from each other by war; they will be divided by death and yin and yang; they will be worn with tinted glasses by different nationalities, but they will still not abandon each other, no matter where they are, that person is in your heart. Today, the footsteps of you and me will become the most beautiful memory of your life. "The Conqueror of the Ocean" will also sail with you sweetly today. On February 14th, there will be special Valentine's Day props waiting for those who love to collect. Special props can be exchanged for props in the game! There are also a series of exclusive Valentine's Day activities. "The Conqueror of the Ocean" has sentiments, don't miss it!