It was new to the armed forces and to Canada and especially
to some of us young fellows. I had a chance to go there
and then they named it the United Nations Emergency Force
because it was an emergency. The Suez crisis, they had
closed the Suez Canal, a battled between France and
England, and Israel later attacked Egypt over it and almost
a full fledge war actually broke out, you know.
So we were assigned to go and it was late December that we
left Halifax on a Canadian Navy aircraft carrier,
loaded down with vehicles and equipment and we were
on the ship, I think it was a 14 day trip from Halifax.
I arrived in Egypt, I remember it was the 11th of
January of '57. Arriving there and just travelling on the ship,
working on the ship, replacing some sailors that
they didn’t take over, we needed jobs to do while
we were on the ship. So I worked in the laundry and again
experience, you know, on something and filling in time.
Anyway we got there and was loading up the ship.
My job again was driving the vehicles off the Maggie,
off the HMCS Magnificent and once we were there,
the UN Headquarters was in a place called Dear Arabella.
So we drove up in there and equipment and then a couple
days later we moved into another camp Abouswaire,
near Ismailia and we were there about four or five months,
that was our home base. And I was only in Egypt about
a week at the most and they started releasing Egyptian
prisoners that had been taken by Israel.
There was 5200 prisoners.
So we had 16 trucks at the time and we had to go and
pick up these prisoners. They probably loaded 40 prisoners
in each vehicle and we had to take them approximately,
I think it was 60 or 70 miles to a little train station,
Mexfax Station it was called. We made enough trips there
that I had seen the sign a few times. And dusty roads and
terrible roads actually. The Israeli Army as they left
Egypt soil to return to Egypt at the end of the war there,
late November of ‘56, they had ripped the road completely up,
just like it was a plowed field and we had to contend with that,
you know. Anyway, we got through that job, probably at
least 15 days, everyday, day and night we worked.
And just to say how it was there, like I say, what made it
such a learning experience was we worked day and night,
like every day, Saturdays included, Sundays and our hours
were from 6:30 to 7:00 o’clock in the morning we’d work til
about 1:00. We’d have a mid coffee break, a sandwich
around 10:00, 10:30 and then we’d be off from 1:00 to 3:00
because it was so hot and go back to work at 3:00, 3:30
and work til about 6:00 and then supper and by the time you
were finished up you were kind of tired out. And they had
absolutely nothing there, they had no sports fields,
no nothing, no rec centres, no swimming holes, nothing.
We were there and we worked constantly.