This is the eighth in a series of reprinted Ernie Pyle columns. Ernie is on
leave.
ALGERIA, DECEMBER 1942: From now onward, stretching for months, and months into
the future, life is completely changed for thousands of American boys on this
side of the earth. For at last they are in there fighting.
The jump from camp life into front-line living is just as great as the original
jump from civilian life into Army. Only those who served in the last war can
conceive of the makeshift, deadly urgent, always - moving - onward complexion of
front-line existence. And existence is exactly the word; it is nothing more.
The last of the comforts are gone. From now-on you sleep in bedrolls under little
tents. You wash whenever and wherever you can. You carry your food on your back
when you are fighting.
You dig ditches for protection from bullets and from the chill north wind off the
Mediterranean. There are no more hot-water taps. There are no post exchanges
where you can buy cigarets. There are no movies.
WHEN YOU SPEAK to a civilian you have to wrestle with a foreign language. You
carry just enough clothing to cover you and no more. You don't lug any
knickknacks at all.
When our troops made their first landings in North Africa they went four days
without even blankets, just catching a few hours' sleep on the ground.
Everybody either lost or chucked aside some of his equipment. Like most troops
going into battle for the first time, they all carried too much at first.
Gradually they shed it. The boys tossed out personal gear from their musette bags
and filled them with ammunition. The countryside for 20 miles around Oran was
strewn with overcoats, field jackets and mess kits as the soldiers moved on the
city.
Arabs will be going around for a whole generatian clad in odd pieces of American
Army uniforms.
AT THE MOMENT our troops are bivouacked for miles around each of three large
centers of occupation - Casablanca, Oran and Algiers. They are consolidating,
fitting in replacements, making repairs - spending a few days taking deep breath
before moving on to other theaters of action.
They are camped in every conceivable way. In the city of Oran some are billeted
in office buildings, hotels and garages. Some are camping in parks and big,
vacant lots on the edge of town. Some are miles away, out in the country, living
on treeless stretches of prairie. They are in tiny groups and in huge batches.
Some of the officers live in tents and sleep on the ground. Others have been
lucky enough to commandeer a farmhouse or a barn, sometimes even a modern villa.
The tent camps look odd. The little low tents hold two men apiece and stretch as
far as you can see.
There are Negro camps as well as white.
You see men washing mess kits and clothing in five-gallon gasoline cans heated
over an open fire made from sticks and pieces of packing cases. They strip naked
and take sponge baths in the heat of the day. In the quick cold of night they
cuddle up in their bedrolls.
You see Negroes playing baseball under the bright African sun during their spare
hours of an afternoon.
The American soldier is quick in adapting himself to a new mode of llving.
Outfits which have been here only three days have dug vast networks of ditches
three feet deep in the bare brown earth. They have rigged up a light here and
there with a storage battery. They have gathered boards and made floors and side
boards for their tents to keep out the wind and sand. They have hung out their
washing, and painted their names over the tent flaps. You even see a soldier
sitting on his "front step" of an evening playing a violin.
They've been here only three days and they know they're unlikely to be here three
more days but thy patch up some kind of home nevertheless.
EVEN IN THIS SHORT waiting period life is far from static. Motor convoys roar
along the highways. Everything is on a basis of "Not a minute to spare." There is
a new spirit - among the troops - a spirit of haste.
Planes pass constantly, eastbound. New detachments of troops wait for orders to
move on. Old detachments tell you the stories of their first battle, and
conjecture about the next one. People you've only recently met hand you slips of
paper with their home addresses and say, "You know, in case something happens,
would you mind writing . . ."
At last we are in it up to our necks, and everything is changed, even your
outlook on life.
Swinging first and swinging to kill is all that matters now.
--Ernie Pyle