Twice in this century, Germany initiated wars of unimagined terror and destruction.
The final result: a far deeper understanding of the tattered lands of today\'s Eastern Europe..
The story is spiced with interviews and reminiscences, unforgettable in their sadness, of people looking back at a life now gone, a life full of turmoil and heartache, memories both fond and tragic.
They intermingle present-day observations with moving vignettes from the German and Prussian past, sketching a portrait of the Europe we know today.
Modern travelers can now, for the first time in decades, see and ponder for themselves what Prussia really was and now is.
James Charles Roy and Amos Elon, two writers noted for their inquisitive natures, have gone to search Through the rubble themselves.
With the Berlin Wall now a memory and the Soviet Union in a state of collapse, this remains a geography in shambles.
In its final catastrophe of 1945, nearly two million German refugees fled the region as Russian armies broke the eastern front, perhaps the greatest dislocation of a civilian population at any time during World War II.
For centuries thereafter its terrain has been crisscrossed by war and partitioned by barbed wire.
To most, it means unbridled aggression, the image of the goose-stepping Junker .
But what was once Prussia is now a significant portion of Eastern Europe, a contested homeland first won by Christian knights of the Teutonic Order.
Few today understand with any precision what ``Prussia`` means, either geographically or nationalistically, but neither would they deny the psychic resonance of the single word.
In both cases, defense of the ``Prussian`` realm, the German homeland, was the perceived and vilified perpetrator.
Twice in this century, Germany initiated wars of unimagined terror and destruction