Being a man of a certain age, I have always been a great admirer of the generation ahead of me and their resoluteness in the face of adversity.
Their
resilience and fortitude during the Second World War when ordinary men and
women donned the many and various uniforms of the armed forces and stood up to
be counted.
In
the beginning it was a voluntary system and you had some level of choice as to
what arm of the forces you wanted to go into but once you chose your preferred
service there was no guarantee that you would get it and once in you had no
control as to what you would end up doing.
Now
obviously some roles were more dangerous than others but nonetheless I still
think they were very brave.
There
wasn’t really a cushy number to be had you were all in the firing line to some degree.
And
it wasn’t just those in military uniform who risked their lives.
Police,
Firemen, ARP, fire watchers, Observers and the merchant marine were just as
brave.
If
it were me joining up back, then I’m not sure which service I would have
preferred.
But
whatever service you ended up with or the role within it there were some more
hazardous than others.
Some
so hazardous that it was like wearing a target along with the uniform.
The
peril that some of them placed themselves under was truly astonishing and there
are a number who deserve special mention, so I have picked one example from
each service and one civilian occupation to illustrate the courage that was commonplace.
Paratroopers
Finding
a candidate from the Army was quite difficult as it is such a broad church.
With
many suitable examples to choose from but after some little thought I settled
on the paratroopers who I once heard described as the “umbrella danglers”.
In
army strategy one of the cardinal sins is to allow your forces to become surrounded
or cut off from the main body.
I
member reading about an American soldier from one of their airborne divisions,
It
was after the Germans had broken through the Allied lines in the heavily
forested Ardennes region of Wallonia in Belgium which is perhaps better known
as the Battle of the Bulge.
The
soldier was reporting to his officer on the situation and said
“The
Germans have us surrounded sir”
The
officer looked directly at the young soldier and replied
“We’re
paratrooper’s son, we’re supposed to be surrounded”
And
that kind of sums them up really.
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