Entering Rome
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Some of the first troops they had going into the Vatican city.
We're invited there to visit the Pope. I was one of the first
one's there.
Interviewer: What do you remember about that?
Well that Vatican city, it ah, was a city it's a right in the
center of Rome. It's, it's all guarded by Swiss guards eh,
we went in there, boy what a beautiful place eh. It's a city in
it's self. The Pope got up there and addressed all the Canadians
and glad to see us come. And it was sure, you know it was
something to see, to get into the Vatican city because it's well
guarded ya know. When the Germans left, they bypassed it, most of
the troops bypassed it ya see.
Interviewer: Tell me Mr Berard, that was June 5th 1944 when Rome
was liberated?
Yeah.
Interviewer: The next day was June 6th, D-Day the day that the
allies landed in Northwest Europe.
Yes, and that was, that was good news. I remember we came
back into the airports in North Africa and Italy and everything.
And ah, when that invasion, we looked up in the air and it was
cloudy. There was that many planes. The ground just shook, day
after day and I'm telling you it was amazing you know to see
so many planes.
Interviewer: Tell me Mr Berard, shortly before the taking of Rome
Lady Ashter is reported to have called you men that were
fighting in Italy the D-Day Dodgers. Do you remember that?
Well I heard some myth about it after, but not then. Because
I don't know why but there was something said about
MacKenzie King. I remember when he, we were in England when he
come over there and started shooting off and everybody booed
him. They booed him right off the bridge square, and ah..
Interviewer: You had other reasons to be upset by that time in
Italy because of the reinforcement problems?
Oh yes.
Interviewer: What do you remember about that?
I remember there in Ortona there at the front there, we had,
we were getting reinforcements you know. I had 16 men and when we
left Italy I only had 8 and I remember some of the reinforcements
there. I remember I ended up in the hospital there in Salerno
and ah, I asked these guys how long you been here?
One guy says, "4days". They're just reinforcements they just put
them in a line and they got hit right away. Ya know and these
some of these guys had hardly any training, they must have had
some but, but ya know. I was just saysaying that how lucky you
are, you just got your foot blown off, and ya know and the shape
some of these guys were in. Cause I'm telling you I lost some
good friends over there.
Interviewer: So it seemed to you that the reinforcements were
coming to you under trained?
Oh yes. I think so, because you know that you have to, these guys
come under your wing, ya know, ya have to look after them you
know. It's a funny thing about when your with guys, that sleeping
with guys and, and everything. We looked after each other, and
we're lucky that when a guy got a parcel we shared ya know,
we had ah, when we went out there to Leer Valley there. Oh, Chris
Vokes told us. "Boys don't go hungry, there lots of beef in that
country." and ah, most of them guys was easterners there. I was
with one guy, was a butcher and if he saw spotted a pig or a
beef at night, that was ours.
Description
Mr. Berard remembers being among some of the first troops to enter Rome.
Robert John Berard
Robert John Berard was born in 1921 in Tofield, Alberta, son of a farmer, with five brothers and three sisters. In 1941, he enlisted in the Edmonton Fusiliers and was sent to Scotland in June 1942 as part of reinforcements for the Regina Rifles. He joined one of his brothers with the Royal Canadian Engineers in Sicily.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 05:07
- Person Interviewed:
- Robert John Berard
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Royal Canadian Engineer
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