Mr. Voshinin. Thirteen—yeah.
Me and my mother we left first for Greece and then to Turkey, and my father left directly to Turkey and we met in Constantinople, now Istanbul in Turkey.
Mr. Jenner. Uh-huh.
Mr. Voshinin. And, after that, we altogether went to Yugoslavia where we lived up to this last war.
Mr. Jenner. 1940——
Mr. Voshinin. In 1942, the Germans forced me to go to work to Germany, and actually, I jumped their train and remained in Austria close to Yugoslavia. And after—by the end of the war when the Communists were close, you know, we moved further west and somehow managed to come to Kempten——
Mr. Jenner. To what?
Mr. Voshinin. To Kempten in south Bavaria—[spelling] K-e-m-p-t-en—and that's where we met the American Army.
Mr. Jenner. What you mean is that the American Army in its advance reached the Bavarian area and freed you?
Mr. Voshinin. Well, the American Army came to Kempten on 25th of April and we reached Kempten on the 12th of April. So, I was just 13 days in Germany before the American Army.