We were promised that we would have a turkey and a real Canadian
Christmas dinner which seemed wonderful, so we were all excited
about that. Anyway, we... the ward I was on that time as I say
had 250 up patients. So what we had done, we had a... was a long
long, long corridor. So we had all... we got tables and we put
sheets on and we had the patients come there for their dinner.
We got chairs. I don’t know where they came from and a lot
of us candy from home, cigarettes and some decorations and stuff,
so we fixed up the table and we thought we had it pretty nice.
We had our Canadian cigarettes and a lot of us didn’t smoke very
much and we used to give it to the boys. We figured they needed
it. Not only did they need it, they were used to it, but also
the English cigarettes were expensive and they were awful. But
anyway, we saw that everybody had two or three cigarettes and we
had fixed up a nice table and that was fine. So after they had
their dinner at noon and the officers served the men and that was
fine, and then just when we were going for our time off, go to
get our lunch, the nursing sister from across the canal, she
worked at what would be an outpatients, she phoned and she said,
“The orderlies are having a Christmas dinner at 3 o’clock,”
she says, “and it’s bare tables.” She said, “We can’t give
them bare tables and just a Christmas dinner and no
decoration. Can you find anything?” So three of us got
going. One went to the MO’s and the sisters to see if we could
get some more candy, cigarettes, whatever and another one went
for... get the table cloths. See what we could do with that and
then we went over and helped her set up the table. We got it all
set up. We didn’t have time for lunch because we had to go and
help her. Well, that was alright. So we came back and we
got a cup of tea, I think, but we... everything was fine and we
did have a nice table for the orderlies because the orderlies
were so good. We just couldn’t have won the war without them.
They were just great. So that was fine and then it was time for
us. All the sisters were to be together to have their dinner at
our mess. So, because we had been on duty the four of us or six
of us, I guess there was four from our ward and then Jeannie was
from outpatients, who’d called for help. There were four or six
of us. We were the last to get there. The table was set like
an “E”, you know, like this, and down here and we were sitting at
this just at the end where the great pots were of potatoes and
turkey and gravy and everything. So as they were going along,
they couldn’t be served because we had to... there was no room.
So we just passed them along. So we were getting kind of tired,
passing them... they had to go up and down this way and up this
way, When it was coming down the “E” one of the girls said,
“Those pots sound empty.” And we said, “No, they couldn’t be.”
And she says, “Won’t be any left.” We said, “This is
Christmas. There will be enough left for us.” Got down to the
bottom and there was nothing for the four of us or six of us.
It was just empty. Well anyway they went out and they got us
some spam and we had dehydrated potatoes and hard peas and
everything and I don’t know whether we got any dessert or
not. It may have been prunes, but it struck us so funny. So any
way that was that. We thought, if we had just put our thumb
in and take a little bit, you know, as it went by we would have
had a dinner. But however, that, I think, was very good for all
of us there because we realized how we stress so much
on the dinner and how lucky we are to have a good dinner and yet,
those of us at the end, who didn’t get the dinner...
we probably had a much better meal than a lot of people out in
the country. Far better meal. So I’ve never made any fuss about
food since.