Joe90 wrote:
My grandparents said they were children in the war so they didn't really take it seriously, but I think a child with AS would because of their anxiety and deep thinking. In fact Aspies were probably traumatized by it, plus all the loud bombs and unpredictability must have been terrifying. I understand that children with just AS weren't recognised by their condition back then because AS wasn't discovered, but I still wonder how they coped.
Joe90 wrote:
Was autism known back then?
I guess it was, but you had to be really low functioning to qualify. There were no HFA or Aspergers (Hans Asperger only started his work during WW2).
What i have heard was that most children were moved north into the UK countryside, as well as some industries to avoid being bombed by Germany, my mom on the other hand lived as a child in Helsinki in Finland and experienced air raids from the soviet union and witnessed some really horrific things.
In Sweden not much happened since we were neutral (well, most of the time, besides cracking German HQ crypto and sharing that + intelligence with UK/USA) and had started a large rearmament program. At the end of the war our
significant bomber fleet was in reach of Berlin so... There were some minor incidents happening at the borders (like unauthorised air intercepts into Finland to take out soviet fighters), but only one city (Stockholm) was hit during the war, don't know if it was deliberate or a mistake.
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