1940
- the year of Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain and huge air raids on some
of our big cities. I had just started at a grammar school in Birmingham.
The night of our miraculous survival was my eleventh birthday - but there
was no party celebration for me. We followed our usual evening routine and
went down the Anderson air-raid shelter at about 6 o'clock - just before
the first wave of German Heinkel bombers arrived with their high explosive
bombs, land mines and incendiaries. |
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As we listened to the bombs exploding all around us we tried to outdo the noise with interesting discussions and singing. "We" included my father, my older sister, her husband and myself. We were comfy enough, armed with a flask of tea, torches and extra warm clothing for our night in the shelter, and eventually we all fell asleep in our bunks.
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I remember nothing more until I recovered consciousness to find myself being carried to a first-aid post, where they bandaged my cut head. Our shelter had had a direct hit and the shelter and bunks had become a tangled, twisted mess. We had all been thrown out onto the ground outside but survived with cuts and bruises.
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It saddens me that in the 60 years since those days the new generations have not understood that greed and power will always mean cruelty and war. Will human beings ever learn, I wonder?
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Sheila
Cooper (nee Delaney)
20th June 2001 |