Marlag und Milag Nord was a World War II German prisoner-of-war camp complex for men of the British Merchant Navy and Royal Navy. It was located around the village of Westertimke, about 30 km (19 mi) north-east of Bremen, though in some sources the camp's location is given as Tarmstedt, a larger village about 4 km (2.5 mi) to the west.
Of more than 5,000 Allied merchant seamen captured by the Germans during the war, most were held at Marlag-Milag. As civilian non-combatants, according to Section XI, Article 6, of the 1907 Hague Conventions, merchant seamen "...are not made prisoners of war, on condition that they make a formal promise in writing, not to undertake, while hostilities last, any service connected with the operations of the war." The Germans, however, always treated Merchant Navy seamen as POWs (as did the British from 1942). In 1943 the Germans suggested an exchange of equal numbers of Merchant Navy prisoners, but this offer was refused by the First Lord of the Admiralty A. V. Alexander on the grounds it would be more to Germany's benefit, as it would provide them with a large number of men suitable to be used as U-boat crews, of which they were desperately short.
MORE LIKE YOU
Kim Hill and Jamie Kenney
Your love overwhelms me
Your peace is beyond compare
Your mercy waits to surround me
If I dare
So I kneel before You, Father
In the shadow of Your might
And I pray that You will hear this cry
And heal my heart tonight
Im longing for You, Lord
I need You to fill me more and more
Im desperate for You, Jesus
Whatever You have to do
Make me more like You
Ive known You in sorrow
Ive seen you through my tears
I feel the warmth of your touch
When you're near
May the scars I bear be sacred?
And this brokenness be real
May the wounds so deep inside my heart
Reflect you as they heal
Strengthen me
According to your promise
Renew me
With the fragrance of your word
Hold me up, if the water overtakes me