Shoot the guy
Heroes Remembers - Liberation of the Netherlands
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Transcript
Ya, there was a lot of hunger in cities and like, the dairy
farmers, they, the cows go in the, in the, in the field. They
stay out in the fields, like in Canada. They, they bring them in
for milking time. But down there, they watch that all the time.
And they had a watchmen with, with the herd overnight. People
used to go from the city with little pails and pans and bottles,
and they milk one quart . . . they used to get milk. And, and,
on the grain farms, when, when, when the, the harvest was
removed, people used to come and they, they scoured the field
for little grain hatch what they ( inaudible ). The farmer,
when, when, whenever they . . . at threshing time, they had an
inspector, and you were, you were pulled in by, by the
government, by the German Government. And every bag which came
off the threshing machine was marked down. So, there was this
one place, and he had a truckload of his wheat, was supposed to
go to the city, and, and the inspector wouldn't let him go. And
one guy says, "Shoot the guy," you know, and this was my
neighbour. And he says, "Well," he says, "I, I have to have
permission. I can't just go ahead and shoot him." So, my
neighbour, he went next door to another underground fella. I
guess he was his commander, or something, and once he left the
farm a shot was fired. So, my neighbour, he turns around and he
went back to the barn, and here was the inspector. And he got
the blame for . . . he was in jail for a number of years and,
finally, the Dutch court-marshalled . . . they said . . . He
said, "You handled as a soldier," they said. They set him free.
But in the meantime, at the same night, some people took the
body of the inspector, and they put it in a big burlap bag, and
they throw it in the ditch. And, and his bike, they throw it in
another ditch. So, the next morning, somebody comes around, and
they saw this bike in the water. And then they went, he went to
pick up the bike, and he found papers and so on it. So, he took
it to the police, which he should have never done. So, he took
it to the police and some guy was arrested, and he was shot in
the, in the shower at the police station. And after the war, of
course, the family wanted to know what happened, and they dug it
all up. And that's why my neighbour ended up in the, in the
coop, and he was set free because of he was handled as a
soldier. I don't know if he did it or whether somebody else did
it, but he, he was linked to it. So, after the war, they went to
Australia. He said, "I'm never gonna stay here," he says. Well,
I think the Lancaster, the bombers, come and they drop food. But
in our part of the country, you know, people came and pick it
up. And they, they flew low to begin with and, and the, the
doors on the bottom opened up, and then all these parachutes
fell out with boxes and cartons and things, and they landed on
to the ground. And people came and picked it up, and they
shipped it to the city. And there was, was quite a few planes
involved in this, 10, 15 at a time, one wave after another.
Description
Mr. Lammers discusses food shortages and the involvement of the Dutch underground and Allied air support for supplying the cities with food.
Henk Lammers
Mr. Lammers was born near Amsterdam, Holland, on March 11, 1926. At the time of German occupation, he was 14 and worked on his and his neighbour’s farms. He offers numerous perspectives on life in Holland during the Second World War. In 1946, Mr. Lammers joined the Dutch Army and served a tour of duty in Dutch Indonesia, namely Sumatra and Java. Mr. Lammers now resides in Ayton, Ontario, where he has been actively involved with the Cadets.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 3:26
- Person Interviewed:
- Henk Lammers
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Holland/Netherlands
- Battle/Campaign:
- Liberation of Holland
- Branch:
- Army
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