Band of Brothers
Heroes Remember
Transcript
First off, your primary responsibility as we
understood it and I believe this to be
true today is to your fellow members and
these people, the people that you
were with are brothers.
Through the basic training, the advanced
training, the battle inoculations,
exercises that we went through and finally
it came to fruition in a battle situation.
Or, not so much a battle situation but in
the exposure to death, to dying, to the
terrible destruction of the land.
All of these things I think played a part
in what we ultimately became, brothers.
And even today I have more feeling
for my comrades than I have for family.
They are more, these guys are more my
brother than my biological brothers are.
I don't know if you can feel that or
understand that but that is how it is and
that's how it is when
you go out into that valley.
Description
Mr. Ferguson discusses the bonding and brotherhood that begins in basic training, and which receives its ultimate test in combat.
Luther Ferguson
Luther Ferguson was born in Mayview, Saskatchewan on October 23, 1933. He describes himself as being “unworldly, poorly educated and having low self-esteem.” Mr. Ferguson felt that the Army offered him the best opportunity to both further his education and improve his life. He enlisted in 1951, and soon found himself a combatant in the Korean War, where he served in the infantry. Mr. Ferguson’s accounts lean heavily on the psychological impacts of training and warfare, and the devastation experienced by the civilian population during the Korean conflict.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 1:41
- Person Interviewed:
- Luther Ferguson
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Korean War
- Battle/Campaign:
- Korea
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Royal Canadian Regiment
- Rank:
- Private
- Occupation:
- Infantryman
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