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Introduction
This custom building block minifigure represents a WWII German Volkssturm Militia Member, specifically depicting an older civilian conscript from the desperate final days of the war.
Visually, the character is dressed entirely in everyday civilian clothing rather than a standard military uniform, featuring a light grey pinstripe double-breasted suit jacket worn over a white shirt and dark tie, paired with matching pinstripe trousers and black shoes. On his head, he wears a classic civilian dark grey fedora hat with a black band. His face print shows a tense, yelling expression framed by round wire-rimmed glasses. To show his hasty transition to a frontline combatant, his torso features printed tactical gear, specifically two German stick grenades (Stielhandgranate) tucked securely into improvised suspenders or harness straps across his chest. The absolute most crucial historical identifying feature is the bright yellow armband printed on his left sleeve, which historically designated him as a lawful militia combatant rather than a civilian.
Historically, the Volkssturm (People’s Storm) was a national militia established by Nazi Germany during the final catastrophic months of World War II, from late 1944 to 1945. As the regular Wehrmacht army was decimated by advancing Allied and Soviet forces, the government forcibly conscripted all remaining men between the ages of 16 and 60, many of whom were elderly or had previously been deemed unfit for service. Due to severe late-war supply shortages, the German military could not provide these civilian soldiers with standard military uniforms. Instead, they fought in exactly what they wore to work—business suits, winter coats, and civilian fedoras—which is perfectly captured by this minifigure’s attire. To legally identify them as lawful combatants under the rules of war and avoid them being executed as illegal partisans upon capture, the state issued them the distinctive Volkssturm armband, which was often a simple yellow or white strip of cloth with black lettering. These vastly under-equipped and poorly trained civilian militias were heavily utilized as last-ditch defenders during the brutal, close-quarters street fighting in the Battle of Berlin, often armed only with simple hand grenades or disposable anti-tank rockets against overwhelming armor.



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