That's oddly specific.SS only did blood group tattoo on the arm no Swasticas. Probably done by whore during drunken orgy at one off many brothels in Sault Ste Marie in the mid 50s. He was probably working on the ships on great lakes.
In Ontario, we even have a town called Swastika. Home of Ontario Gun and Tackle
Not exactly about WWII firearms but sorta.
When I was a kid in Port Hardy there was a Polish guy who was a pretty tough nut. Had a .38 revolver and when he had people over for drinks he'd challenge them to play Russian roulette. There are a lot of other stories, some pretty cruel, but I won't repeat them.
He said he could never go back to Poland because the communists would kill him.
When he died his family had some of his momentos from WWII including a uniform cap and some medals from the Polish Home Army.
What I could never figure out was shortly before he died I happened to be back in Port Hardy on a hot summer day and bumped into him at the dock and he had his shirt open to the navel and a faded old tattoo on his chest. "What's that?" the guy I was with asked.
"Hakenkreuz" he answered.
I know enough German to recognize that word and looked closely at the tattoo and sure enough, his whole chest was covered with this swastika tattoo.
He never said anything else about it but since then I always wondered if he had been in the resistance why did he have that tattoo?
In Ontario, we even have a town called Swastika. Home of Ontario Gun and Tackle
More likely he was Volks Duetches Pole who was a happy SS man til the war ended. Then having a name similar to another dead pole who was Home Army, he avoided a 10 year working vacation in Mother Russia but became hated as a Capitalist when the PoleComs formed the Polish government.
About 500,000 poles served with Nazi troops. Just on the west front Brits and Americans captured 90,000 of them as POWs. On top of it, there were thousands who served on occupied ex-Poland. Number of them has been acting against local Polish Home Army.
So, uniform means absolutely nothing! In fact, it could be something used to assist running away from punishment.
In simple terms, given Swastika and being afraid to go back is likely a result of past war crimes. In communist Poland being a member of PHA in the past was not a crime. However, they would prosecute people who committed war crimes against Polish civilians as part of Nazi regime.
That's my guess as well.
There is an interesting story of a private in the Estonian border Patrol who was drafted in the Red Army in 1940. In 41 he was captured by the Germans and became security police in the German army. In 43 he was transferred to the SS Estonian division. In late 44 during the retreat he went home and was drafted into the Red Army Estonian Rifle Corps. In late 45 he took his weapons into the woods and fought as Forest Brother for a decade. After the death of Stalin he surrendered and did 10 years in a prison. He retired a gardener in Estonia in the 80s. That's an example of how it worked in the East.
If the communists wanted to kill him, there's a good chance it's because he was a Nazi collaborator, which might explain the tattoo.
Crazy, I know. I've read about some other people who flipped sides by chance during the war.