Language selection


Search veterans.gc.ca

Last Days of War. Remembering Comrades.

Heroes Remember

Last Days of War. Remembering Comrades.

Transcript
We went in there and some of the prisoners they took was only kids about 14 - 15 years old and Germans. Farther down we got there was older guys. I remember this Dutchman coming up and telling us there's some Germans in there, (inaudible) I went there and those guys there were about 60 or 70 years old and they were sure glad to give up. And ah, and we had to build a, blow a few roadblocks on the road, that's all they had roadblocks and mines, so we cleared them. And I remember I was gonna, there was a roadblock there and I got the boys together I said, "We're going to blow this base" and the Colonel, West Novies, he says, "You guys take it easy now, I know, I know what your platoon is like." He says, "Save them houses over there." He says, "Don't break any windows." And I says, "OK.." You know, cause he knew what these demolition guys got in there, they'd go through all right, but ah, they didn't want us to blow up any of them houses, and ah, ah we went up there, and we went on them (inaudible) carriers and they took ah, these, these Germans started giving up and a Dutchman came over and he said there's a a Colonel and everything over in the house. So we went over and I remember this guy I was with, he looked at the Colonel and the guy, guy had a nice sheepskin jacket. He said, "Bob, that'll just fit me." I says, "Go ahead, take it," and it was things like that you don't forget. I had to laugh at him because he said, "That just fit me." And then we went to one place the Germans blew one little bridge there and we cleared that, and we came back and that's where the war ended. And we're in this center for about ten days. You could see the vehicles over there on one side, some of the people walking. Then when the war ended we headed for Rotterdam and the Germans are coming and we're going. The guys are trading wrist watches and everything and the people was so happy the war was ended. We got into Rotterdam, and of course we had to eat, we had a kitchen and people are cooking, cooks are there and everything. And the people, the girls, kids and everything was coming. We couldn't eat, because we had to give them food, ya know. We went past that town and got a billeted in a little town there. I'm telling ya, them people were happy. One of the nicest people, I think I've met is those Dutch people. Interviewer: How difficult was it for you to say goodbye to those men that were with you? Well it's hard you know, guys you get attached to, guys you are with in action two or three, a couple of years two months. You know it's hard, there just like a brother to you, you know. Cause everything we done we shared, ya know. We had to in order to survive, and ah, and no matter what somebody had done, he was your friend, that's all. Interviewer: Is there a bond between you men even today? Oh yes, there is. Ya know that something I'll never forget. Army life was one of the best things that ever happened in my life because discipline is something I'll never forget. Even today if I met one of my friends, if he was broke I'd help him, cause I know he'd do the same for me and that's one reason I went back to Holland. To lay a wreath because I remember. I remember going through the, the graveyard there and I was looking at the, you know the ages, looking for people I knew. There was some there, 18, 19, 20. If you found anybody 21 that was old and it made me think because, how lucky I was and ah and that's why I went over there. I wanted to go over. And because I know they'd have done the same for me. That's how, how closely ya get knitted to people you know.
Description

Mr. Berard remembers the last days of the war, in Holland and also reflects on how difficult it was for the men who had served together for so long to go their separate ways at the end of the war.

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:
05:42
Person Interviewed:
Robert John Berard
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
Royal Canadian Engineer

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

Related Videos

Date modified: