The Forgotten Army
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I was on a … V-E Day, I was … tour expired on a squadron. And I
was over in another squadron with other duties as an instructor
trying to teach Liberator pilots, or at least
Lancaster pilots about Liberators.
Well, when that program was given up, so, I wasn’t doing
anything really. We had a hurricane. And the hurricane came
through and it wiped out the squadron. Knocked down all the
buildings, ruined all sixteen aircraft we had and it set the
mess on fire, which burned down, and so we didn’t have and
while all this had taken place, someone said it was V-E Day in
Europe. Well, we discovered that while the mess has burned down,
the bar supplies hadn’t perished. And we were able make our way
into the bar supplies and we had ourselves a pretty good party
with the excuse that it was victory in Europe.
But really, our war was Japan and we always felt resentful of
Europe because they got everything first. Everything that was
any good, they got first. They had radar on their aircraft
before, long before we ever saw any of it in the East, the Far
East. And the Middle East was getting the next wave of
equipment. And it seemed to be what was left over found its way
to the Burma theatre. And it was literally the forgotten war. It
was not a big press thing in Europe or in Canada or the U.S. The
U.S. was the Pacific and that’s what they were, and Europe. But
Canada and Britain were really Europe and the invasion of
Europe, and you know we know all about that.
And the way things were handled with V-E Day and the D-Day
landing celebrations. The 60th celebration or what had been done
in connection with this. With the victory in Japan, or victory
over Japan has had relatively little coverage.
It’s sort of almost an afterthought.
But there is a resentment because there’s always the short end
of the stick for the Burma group, whether it was the transport
fellows or the bomb group. Even Mountbatten was aware of this
and spoke to the 14th army people. It’s a famous quote in a book
that’s around. You’re not the forgotten army because people have
to know. You have to be known before you can be forgotten. And
they’ve never even heard of you.
Description
Mr. Sharpe talks about the lack of recognition that the Burma Campaign has received.
Charles Richard “Dick” Sharpe
Charles Richard Sharpe was born in St. Catharines, Ontario on February 11, 1925. His father worked for the Canada Customs Service, getting pensions for wounded Veterans. A Veteran of World War One, Mr. Sharpe’s father told him many stories about the war.
Mr. Sharpe joined the RCAF on the morning of his 18th birthday and became a pilot. He flew 23 missions for the RCAF and rose to the rank of Flight Lieutenant. After the war, Mr. Sharpe became a very successful businessman, serving for many years as CEO of Sears Canada. Among his many awards and recognitions, in 1998, he became a member of the Order of Canada.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:25
- Person Interviewed:
- Charles Richard “Dick” Sharpe
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Southeast Asia
- Battle/Campaign:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 159 Squadron
- Rank:
- Lieutenant
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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