The blog for Richard Charon Associate/Consultant at Newbury Smile Studio Dental Practice
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
Saturday, June 07, 2014
Reflections and Facebook comments as I watched the D-Day remembrances
By midday on 7th June 43 people had liked this Facebook post. Many of these friends I know face to face as it were , others might be described as Facebook "pen-pals".
Watching some of the D-Day remembrances and celebrations yesterday brought the following thoughts to mind about my own Dad who passed away in 1986.
"I only wish I could say that my Dad did his bit in WWII and gallantly made his way up the Normandy beaches.What I can say is a huge thank you and pay my deepest respects to those who did their bit on D-Day and before and after to liberate France then Europe. I owe my existence to them together with my children and grandchildren.
Here is my Dad sometime before June 1940 in the French army.
He was an artilleryman. In WWII, the French at least were still using
Napoleonic tactics. My Dad, a city boy aged 21 in 1939 was conscripted, sat on a horse and told to control a second horse drawing the gun you see him with here.
He learned fast! Dodging German fire and Stuka attacks, no doubt amongst much more besides,he survived long enough to be held as a POW by the Germans on the collapse of France in May/June 1940.
For a period of time he was in a forced labour camp, essentially helping to keep French agriculture afloat until, just before he was due to be deported to a concentration camp , he escaped with outside help from his sister. She had somehow managed to keep tabs on him and basically he pedalled off in the night on a bike she supplied to him. He spent the rest of the war keeping out of sight until France was liberated. He never spoke about those days. He left France shortly after the war and became a naturalised Brit. some years later. I will remember them, on his behalf.Here is my Dad sometime before June 1940 in the French army.He was an artilleryman. In WWII, the French at least were still using Napoleonic tactics. My Dad, a city boy aged 21 in 1939 was conscripted, sat on a horse and told to control a second horse drawing the gun you see him with here.He learned fast! Dodging German fire and Stuka attacks, no doubt amongst much more besides,he survived long enough to be held as a POW by the Germans On the collapse of France in June 1940.
For a period of time he was in a forced labour camp, essentially helping to keep French agriculture afloat until, just before he was due to be deported to a concentration camp , he escaped with outside help from his sister. She had somehow managed to keep tabs on him and basically he pedalled off in the night on a bike she supplied to him. He spent the rest of the war keeping out of sight until France was liberated. He never spoke about those days. He left France shortly after the war and became a naturalised Brit. some years later."
I will remember them, on his behalf.
Facebook comments and conversations
6th June 2014
6th June 2014
- Martin Geoffrey Fallowfield, Heather Grimes, Louise Spry and 43 others like this.
- Simon Thackeray That's just as heroic a story as anything told today. Today is a day like 11/11 that should be about remembrance as much as anything else.
- Julia Parry-jones Sounds like he did more than his fair share to me ! It sounds like just staying alive was a huge achievement .
Well done M Charon !
Some amazing stories of survival , this is one of them ! Be very proud ! - Anneliese Bradley What an amazing story Richard, you must be so proud of him and your wonderfully brave ( and clearly ballsy ) Aunt too!! x
- Richard Summersby That is an amazing story. He was a very brave man and you are rightly proud of him.
- Richard Charon Thank you kindly Simon Thackeray and Julia Parry-jones and other likers. Much appreciated.
- Richard Charon To be truthful I really never considered him brave. In his own way maybe so. He did what was required of him by his country at that time and then somehow managed to stay alive. I have probably told here 90% of everything I know of his war years. That is an awful lot of untold stories. Most no doubt pretty terrifying and miserable but time and again we hear of those on the frontline who never talk about what they really went through. No doubt a self-protection mechanism. Much of it too painful to bear recalling.
- Richard Charon Now more thanks to everyone who has taken the time to read the story and for all of your very generous comments. It means a lot.
- Julia Parry-jones Even the very bravest went because they had little choice Richard , given the choice the majority wouldn't Im sure , my Dad now 91 , never talks about the war , I remember my Granny saying she sent a very young man to war and got a sad old man back.
He is VERY anti the "glorification" of war and refuses to March wearing medals etc .
A few enjoyed their war most hated it and did it because they had to . - Richard Charon Indeed Julia Parry-jones A different story for everyone involved in any way. So pleased to hear that he is still with you.
- Julia Parry-jones Bless him , he still lives in his own home alone and looks after himself , he says if he stops caring for himself , he's done for . Never had an easy life , you can tell I'm very proud of him XX
- Richard Charon Perhaps playing rugby on the wing for Racing Club de Paris before the war kept him fit and nippy enough to stay out of trouble - who knows. When your number is up - it is up!
- John Casson Thanks for sharing his story, we should all be forever thankful for what he and his fellow servicemen did for us
- Richard Charon Thanks once again for all of your comments Debi Richens,Richard Fretwell,John Casson et al. These last couple of hours since posting the story and reading all of your kind comments and likes has been humbling for me. He was no more or less deserving ...See More
- Bridget Doherty A colleague of bens told a similar story in assemblies this week of her own father who she sadly lost only a few months ago. It's so important young people are made aware if the sacrifices people like your father made Richard.
I hope you are well x x
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