Battle
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We stretched out along the front. We were on one side and
there was sort of woods oh a mile or so down lets say. The
Germans were supposedly in. Ah, we crawled up to our position
along there and took over and were told to hold. One day that,
my corporal said that he saw a German through a gap in the trees
and at the same time the next day they saw it again. So the
third day we had all kinds of people there with binoculars
looking to see a real live German and the Corporal said that
would be great ya know. We had a infantry regiment right
beside us. They could send out a patrol and capture this guy and
I thought well that would be great you know, to get this
infantry. We had a front row seat there where we could watch.
So I left and at the Colonel's meeting and I told him about
seeing this German same time every day and how easy I thought
it'd be for a patrol to capture him and before I could suggest
that the infantry unit beside us would be ideal for the job,
he said, "Okay, but be careful we've already had one officer
killed." My mouth sort of fell open you know. This isn't what
I intended at all, I and before I could extricate myself with
honour he was on talking to something else. I talked myself
into a real hole. So we left, I went back to the unit. If we
have to, we have to and I got a couple of fellas. My idea was
that I'd go over and I would try to capture him and the other two
fellas would be there, that if anything happened to me I could
run like hell and they could lay down a covering fire they got
out of there. Basically that was the idea.
So we, we got over and I, we set up our little ambush. I was
behind the bush waiting for him to come down. My other two
troopers were down the road in a place where they could give me
good cover and being unaccustomed to that, you've got no fast or
how fast your heart will pump, actually just sitting there
waiting for something like this to happen. And then I, I saw the
German. He's coming down the road and my heart which was
pumping fast just went out of control as he came down. I
didn't know what to do, but soon he was right beside me. I only
had one thing I could possible do and that was to jump out and
said halt, hand over. I had my Tommy gun there looking
at him and he looked at me didn't do anything I said, "Hand
over." He don't do anything then he made a rush for the ditch
and I just pulled the trigger, and sprayed him as he went in.
He got flying right in the ditch.
I went over to look at this hated Hun. He was laying there, his
helmet was knocked off. His, he had beautiful blond hair, blue
eyes, he looked up at me and an expression of fear and I'll never
forget his expression, but suddenly it vanished, blood
coming out of his nose and mouth. And by the time my two troopers
had raced up, he was dead. I told them to strip him, that way
we get the information, what unit he belonged to etc, etc. So
they ripped off all the his insignia, everything that was in his
pockets, gave it to me and we crawled back to our troop.
I went to see our intelligence officer and I showed him all that
I had and I looked in his wallet to see how much money he had. As
I opened it up, I saw a picture of a, a beautiful girl much about
the, the same age as my wife Norma. This broke me up
completely. I dropped it, left, walked out. It's how she would
cry when she found out he was dead and what sorrow his, his
parents would feel to know that he was killed. I didn't have to
kill him. I could have left, let him go. I never before had
such a deep feeling of remorse about anything in my whole life as
I had about this incident.
Description
Mr. Murray talks about the event that resulted in him shooting a young German soldier, and his life-long reaction to it.
Robert Murray
Robert Murray was born in Toronto, Ontario on February 8, 1918. His father was Inspector of Detectives of the Toronto police force. Mr. Murray had six brothers and sisters. He was the second youngest.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 06:15
- Person Interviewed:
- Robert Murray
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- 48th Highland Regiment
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