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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,000 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 2 00:00:04,001 --> 00:00:08,001 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 3 00:00:08,002 --> 00:00:12,002 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 1 00:00:13,096 --> 00:00:18,225 (narrator) Down this road, on a summer day in 1944, 2 00:00:18,309 --> 00:00:20,686 the soldiers came. 3 00:00:22,230 --> 00:00:24,523 Nobody lives here now. 4 00:00:30,655 --> 00:00:33,949 They stayed only a few hours. 5 00:00:34,034 --> 00:00:35,659 When they had gone, 6 00:00:35,744 --> 00:00:40,247 a community which had lived for a thousand years... was dead. 7 00:00:43,168 --> 00:00:48,005 This is Oradour-sur-Glane in France. 8 00:00:49,049 --> 00:00:51,258 The day the soldiers came, 9 00:00:51,342 --> 00:00:54,219 the people were gathered together. 10 00:00:54,304 --> 00:00:58,015 The men were taken to garages and barns. 11 00:00:58,099 --> 00:01:01,727 The women and children were led down this road... 12 00:01:03,563 --> 00:01:07,024 and they were driven into this church. 13 00:01:08,068 --> 00:01:13,572 Here, they heard the firing as their men were shot. 14 00:01:14,032 --> 00:01:16,533 Then they were killed too. 15 00:01:17,660 --> 00:01:19,411 A few weeks later, 16 00:01:19,496 --> 00:01:24,500 many of those who had done the killing were themselves dead - 17 00:01:24,584 --> 00:01:26,710 in battle. 18 00:01:29,923 --> 00:01:31,965 They never rebuilt Oradour. 19 00:01:32,050 --> 00:01:34,551 lts ruins are a memorial. 20 00:01:36,554 --> 00:01:41,225 lts martyrdom stands for thousand upon thousand of other martyrdoms 21 00:01:41,309 --> 00:01:44,228 in Poland, in Russia, 22 00:01:44,312 --> 00:01:47,815 in Burma, in China, 23 00:01:47,941 --> 00:01:50,567 in a world at war. 24 00:02:52,672 --> 00:02:54,506 (cannon fires) 25 00:02:58,094 --> 00:03:00,179 (bell tolls) 26 00:03:45,725 --> 00:03:48,060 Remember the dead. 27 00:03:52,315 --> 00:03:58,695 ln the Second World War, Britain and her Commonwealth lost 480,000 dead. 28 00:04:02,533 --> 00:04:06,328 120,000 of them were from the Commonwealth. 29 00:04:10,833 --> 00:04:15,754 60,000 were civilians - men, women and children - 30 00:04:15,838 --> 00:04:18,382 killed in air raids on Britain. 31 00:04:22,512 --> 00:04:27,349 Compared to the slaughter of the First World War, the total is not great. 32 00:04:27,433 --> 00:04:29,142 But remember the dead, 33 00:04:29,227 --> 00:04:34,189 each one a son, father, husband, 34 00:04:34,274 --> 00:04:37,693 lover... brother. 35 00:04:43,533 --> 00:04:47,494 (man) We had a telegram to say that he was missing on operations. 36 00:04:47,578 --> 00:04:50,372 And it reads: 37 00:04:50,498 --> 00:04:52,833 "Regret to inform you that your husband, 38 00:04:52,917 --> 00:04:55,961 Squadron Leader Thomas Henry Desmond Drinkwater 39 00:04:56,045 --> 00:04:59,047 is missing as the result of air operations 40 00:04:59,132 --> 00:05:04,094 on Thursday the 18th of May, 1944." 41 00:05:04,178 --> 00:05:07,097 "Letter follows. Any further information received 42 00:05:07,181 --> 00:05:11,727 will be immediately communicated to you." 43 00:05:11,811 --> 00:05:16,815 "Pending receipt of written notification from the Air Ministry, 44 00:05:16,899 --> 00:05:19,526 no information should be given to the press." 45 00:05:19,652 --> 00:05:22,154 (bugles play the Last Post) 46 00:05:55,813 --> 00:05:59,775 (man) lt's very funny, a battlefield. The other day l watched a duck shoot. 47 00:05:59,859 --> 00:06:03,320 The actual area extended to about four square miles, 48 00:06:03,404 --> 00:06:05,405 of which a fifth was in action. 49 00:06:05,490 --> 00:06:08,575 All the rest was waiting. And a battlefield is like that. 50 00:06:08,659 --> 00:06:11,912 lt's extraordinary how inanimate the whole thing seems. 51 00:06:11,996 --> 00:06:15,415 There's a bit of an action going on in the right-hand corner. 52 00:06:15,500 --> 00:06:18,543 For the rest, there are people lying about, smoking. 53 00:06:18,628 --> 00:06:21,338 (narrator) And waiting, and sleeping... 54 00:06:22,507 --> 00:06:24,883 and waiting, 55 00:06:25,093 --> 00:06:26,885 and waiting. 56 00:06:29,597 --> 00:06:33,350 (man) lt's one of the things that films and books don't bring out - 57 00:06:33,434 --> 00:06:35,602 Tolstoy, perhaps, is the exception - 58 00:06:35,686 --> 00:06:38,939 a battlefield where nothing seems to be happening. 59 00:06:39,023 --> 00:06:41,983 The action is always over a hedge somewhere else, 60 00:06:42,068 --> 00:06:44,027 and it's the decisive thing. 61 00:06:44,112 --> 00:06:47,280 And then they ask you if you were there. Well, you weren't. 62 00:06:48,533 --> 00:06:51,201 (narrator) Paris. June, 1940. 63 00:07:00,711 --> 00:07:03,463 They were there all right. 64 00:07:03,589 --> 00:07:08,093 But for these soldiers, no parade, no triumph. 65 00:07:08,177 --> 00:07:11,430 Not the way we're used to seeing it on the newsreels. 66 00:07:19,397 --> 00:07:21,815 All rather quiet, really. 67 00:07:21,899 --> 00:07:25,193 Nothing much to write home about. 68 00:07:25,278 --> 00:07:29,781 Or perhaps this actually was the scene that would stay with them, 69 00:07:29,866 --> 00:07:33,702 the moment the soldiers would always remember. 70 00:07:46,632 --> 00:07:50,760 Looking back, you know, it's even 28 years now. 71 00:07:50,845 --> 00:07:53,930 l can hear it and l can see it, 72 00:07:54,056 --> 00:07:56,224 l can smell it. 73 00:07:56,309 --> 00:08:02,397 And l think anybody who was there must have exactly the same impression, 74 00:08:02,482 --> 00:08:07,402 that, you know, it is something that they will always remember. 75 00:08:09,322 --> 00:08:12,991 (narrator) There's much soldiers don't want to forget. 76 00:08:13,075 --> 00:08:15,452 (♪ band plays military march) 77 00:08:24,504 --> 00:08:28,173 At Mainz in West Germany, veterans of the Deutsches Afrikakorps meet, 78 00:08:28,299 --> 00:08:31,968 as they do every couple of years, to relive the past. 79 00:08:33,763 --> 00:08:36,139 There are wives and camp followers 80 00:08:36,265 --> 00:08:40,852 and guests from Australia, from Britain, from ltaly. 81 00:08:40,937 --> 00:08:44,189 Old comrades, old enemies, 82 00:08:44,273 --> 00:08:46,274 old memories, 83 00:08:46,359 --> 00:08:48,860 and plenty of beer. 84 00:08:50,738 --> 00:08:52,989 (man) lt's a funny thing about marines, 85 00:08:53,074 --> 00:08:56,284 or maybe a funny thing about fighting men of all kinds, 86 00:08:56,369 --> 00:09:00,080 their minds have a tendency to cloud out all of the unhappy things 87 00:09:00,164 --> 00:09:02,541 and you think only of the happy things. 88 00:09:02,625 --> 00:09:06,086 When l'm with other marines and we talk about the war, 89 00:09:06,170 --> 00:09:08,421 we talk about some of the funny things. 90 00:09:08,506 --> 00:09:11,341 We never really dwell on the unhappy ones. 91 00:09:11,425 --> 00:09:15,512 And l think that would be true of fighting men all over the world. 92 00:09:25,439 --> 00:09:28,275 (man #2) One of the things about being in a tank battalion 93 00:09:28,359 --> 00:09:32,070 was that you lived completely with the crew of your tank 94 00:09:32,154 --> 00:09:34,322 and completely with your troop. 95 00:09:34,407 --> 00:09:38,618 And so, at night, for example, when one came in to laager, 96 00:09:38,703 --> 00:09:41,037 one would dig a hole and drive the tank over it 97 00:09:41,122 --> 00:09:44,708 and you ate, slept and did everything with your crew, 98 00:09:44,792 --> 00:09:48,169 so that one got enormously fond of them 99 00:09:48,254 --> 00:09:51,715 and one got to know each other extremely well. 100 00:09:51,799 --> 00:09:55,343 You knew they were making the right decisions and you just drove on. 101 00:09:55,428 --> 00:10:00,223 Apart from the fact you were young and daft and would have gone anywhere. 102 00:10:00,308 --> 00:10:03,393 We didn't really find time to, um, 103 00:10:03,477 --> 00:10:07,480 well, have the sort of conversation that we might have now sitting here. 104 00:10:07,565 --> 00:10:13,069 l certainly never remember discussing, well, the outcome of the war, 105 00:10:13,195 --> 00:10:18,491 or whether the Germans were right or we were right or anything like that. 106 00:10:18,576 --> 00:10:23,663 lt was just day to day, honest-to-goodness living together, 107 00:10:23,748 --> 00:10:25,582 and very pleasant it was. 108 00:10:25,666 --> 00:10:27,709 (moos) 109 00:11:27,937 --> 00:11:32,899 We had a chap who was an experienced butcher as the co-driver, 110 00:11:32,983 --> 00:11:37,654 and he always arranged that there should be two jerry cans of water 111 00:11:37,738 --> 00:11:39,989 behind where the exhaust pipes came out. 112 00:11:40,074 --> 00:11:42,575 They'd be constantly more or less on the boil. 113 00:11:42,660 --> 00:11:46,538 And if, it seemed to me, in the middle of a battle, 114 00:11:46,622 --> 00:11:49,457 whatever was happening, and he spied a pig, 115 00:11:49,542 --> 00:11:53,837 he would leap out, unscrew the great hammer you have for breaking tracks, 116 00:11:53,921 --> 00:11:56,423 and rush oft, bash this pig on the head, 117 00:11:56,507 --> 00:12:00,969 drag it back, bring it in through the side pannier door, um, 118 00:12:01,053 --> 00:12:05,890 and get hold of these two cans of water and light up the stove, 119 00:12:05,975 --> 00:12:08,226 and boil the water and scrape the pig. 120 00:12:08,310 --> 00:12:12,731 We'd have delicious pork chops any time day or night and lived very well. 121 00:12:12,815 --> 00:12:17,944 And it was partly the sort of... the sort of scavenging of the crews 122 00:12:18,028 --> 00:12:22,824 and the finding of the wine and the jam and the eggs and all the other things, 123 00:12:22,908 --> 00:12:27,912 which helped make the comradeship one of the things that made it such fun. 124 00:12:31,792 --> 00:12:34,377 (narrator) Fun. And fear. 125 00:12:37,798 --> 00:12:41,551 (man) l don't think l was frightened. l was scared. 126 00:12:41,635 --> 00:12:44,304 You know, when you're scared, you're more alert. 127 00:12:44,388 --> 00:12:47,807 lt's like you're playing a game with somebody through the woods. 128 00:12:47,892 --> 00:12:52,520 You've got a gun, he's got a gun. Who's gonna shoot first? lt's like a duel. 129 00:12:52,646 --> 00:12:56,065 Who's gonna turn and pull the trigger first? 130 00:13:08,496 --> 00:13:10,997 (narrator) Fear and fun. 131 00:13:12,124 --> 00:13:13,917 Moments, even, of beauty. 132 00:13:20,591 --> 00:13:23,885 (man) Well, l speak of the "lust of the eye", a biblical phrase, 133 00:13:23,969 --> 00:13:26,262 because much of the appeal of battle 134 00:13:26,347 --> 00:13:29,849 is simply this attraction of the, uh, 135 00:13:29,975 --> 00:13:32,769 outlandish, the strange. 136 00:13:32,853 --> 00:13:37,232 But there is, of course, an element of beauty in this, 137 00:13:37,316 --> 00:13:42,987 and l must say that this is surely, from ancient times, 138 00:13:43,113 --> 00:13:47,325 one of the most enduring appeals of battle. 139 00:13:56,335 --> 00:14:00,839 One could be drawn into, absorbed, by the spectacle. 140 00:14:00,923 --> 00:14:06,803 l think especially of southern France, the terrific bombardment of our planes 141 00:14:06,887 --> 00:14:09,097 coming over the southern coast of France. 142 00:14:09,181 --> 00:14:12,976 l literally expected the coast to detach itself 143 00:14:13,060 --> 00:14:16,396 and... and go into the ocean. 144 00:14:16,480 --> 00:14:21,150 But, uh, to watch this was to forget that you had to... 145 00:14:21,235 --> 00:14:25,905 When it stopped, you had to get into landing boats 146 00:14:25,990 --> 00:14:28,157 and make oft for the shore. 147 00:14:28,242 --> 00:14:30,743 lt was, uh, just at dawn, 148 00:14:30,828 --> 00:14:33,997 and a terrific spectacle in which l think everybody, 149 00:14:34,081 --> 00:14:38,167 including, of course, myself, was drawn into it, 150 00:14:38,252 --> 00:14:41,713 so that we forgot all about ourselves. 151 00:15:00,107 --> 00:15:02,317 (narrator) A city falls. 152 00:15:02,401 --> 00:15:06,029 ln an hour, a soldier, senses quickened, time speeded up, 153 00:15:06,113 --> 00:15:09,991 might kill and make love and face death again. 154 00:15:10,075 --> 00:15:15,038 One room had a piano and l was sitting at the piano playing with one finger. 155 00:15:15,122 --> 00:15:18,207 This British soldier, a real, uh... 156 00:15:18,292 --> 00:15:22,629 You couldn't have made a better cartoon of a typical British infantryman. 157 00:15:22,755 --> 00:15:26,841 He was grimy, he was dirty, he had his helmet on, 158 00:15:26,926 --> 00:15:29,010 he had his Enfield rifle, 159 00:15:29,094 --> 00:15:31,846 he had grenades festooned on him, 160 00:15:31,931 --> 00:15:35,183 and he had this young 15-year-old ltalian chick with him, 161 00:15:35,267 --> 00:15:41,773 a very buxom young lass who did not look inexperienced in spite of her age. 162 00:15:41,899 --> 00:15:46,194 And he nodded very politely to me and then ignored me totally 163 00:15:46,278 --> 00:15:49,739 and went to a cupboard over in the corner and found some, uh, 164 00:15:49,823 --> 00:15:52,659 nice, uh... 165 00:15:53,786 --> 00:15:55,912 lace, uh, 166 00:15:56,038 --> 00:15:58,873 table napery or nappery. Whatever. 167 00:15:58,958 --> 00:16:02,460 He found a, uh, doily, which he placed on the floor. 168 00:16:02,544 --> 00:16:06,714 He was very delicate, because the room was full of plaster dust 169 00:16:06,799 --> 00:16:10,802 and proceeded to cohabit with this girl on the doily. 170 00:16:10,886 --> 00:16:13,429 lt was very delicate of him, you know. 171 00:16:13,514 --> 00:16:16,975 And l'm sitting there picking out a tune on the piano watching... 172 00:16:17,059 --> 00:16:20,520 The whole thing was a weird scene. 173 00:16:20,604 --> 00:16:23,773 And l felt, "Would it be better if l left?" 174 00:16:23,857 --> 00:16:27,193 Then l felt, "lt would be too..." l was trying to do the polite thing. 175 00:16:27,319 --> 00:16:29,904 l was trying to, uh... 176 00:16:29,989 --> 00:16:33,449 They never, in a sense, gave me a chance to leave, really. 177 00:16:33,534 --> 00:16:36,077 And so, they left. 178 00:16:36,161 --> 00:16:40,498 The girl smiled over her shoulder at me and the soldier said, "So long, Yank," 179 00:16:40,582 --> 00:16:45,545 or something like that, went back out and back to battle. 180 00:16:46,588 --> 00:16:50,216 lt was a weird sort of a... Probably, in many ways, 181 00:16:50,300 --> 00:16:54,137 probably the weirdest and strangest and most sort of dreamlike thing 182 00:16:54,221 --> 00:16:56,222 l can remember out of the whole war, 183 00:16:56,306 --> 00:16:59,434 this little episode which lasted about five minutes. 184 00:17:06,734 --> 00:17:09,569 (narrator) Good to remember the good days. 185 00:17:14,783 --> 00:17:19,037 The soldiers were welcome. Everyone was happy. 186 00:17:19,121 --> 00:17:21,247 The wine was red. 187 00:17:24,877 --> 00:17:26,586 Wynford Vaughan-Thomas 188 00:17:26,670 --> 00:17:30,298 remembers the liberation of the Burgundy vineyards. 189 00:17:31,383 --> 00:17:33,634 (Vaughan-Thomas) The French army paused. 190 00:17:33,719 --> 00:17:36,012 The Americans couldn't understand it. 191 00:17:36,096 --> 00:17:39,307 They were in the mountains. l remember General Patch saying, 192 00:17:39,391 --> 00:17:42,351 "You know about the French. Why aren't they advancing?" 193 00:17:42,436 --> 00:17:45,271 "They're at this place, Châlons." l looked at the map. 194 00:17:45,355 --> 00:17:47,023 There's a Châlons sur Saóne 195 00:17:47,107 --> 00:17:49,692 at the beginning of the Burgundy vineyard country. 196 00:17:49,777 --> 00:17:52,945 l go across and there was de Lattre de Tassigny, 197 00:17:53,072 --> 00:17:56,115 Monsalbert and their staft looking at the problem. 198 00:17:56,200 --> 00:17:59,744 They had Larmat's Atlas Vinicoie de la France in front of them. 199 00:17:59,828 --> 00:18:02,747 And they were studying it because it would be tragic 200 00:18:02,831 --> 00:18:06,250 if they fought through Beaune and Nuits St George 201 00:18:06,335 --> 00:18:09,796 and the great vineyards of Burgundy. 202 00:18:09,880 --> 00:18:13,257 France would never forgive them. And they were paused. 203 00:18:13,342 --> 00:18:15,593 A young sous-lieutenant said: 204 00:18:15,677 --> 00:18:19,514 "Courage, my generals, l've found the weak spot of the German defences." 205 00:18:19,598 --> 00:18:23,559 "Every one is on a vineyard of inferior quality." 206 00:18:23,644 --> 00:18:26,187 De Lattre made his decision, "J'attaque." 207 00:18:26,313 --> 00:18:30,983 And for three days, we fought our way through the cellars. 208 00:18:31,068 --> 00:18:35,404 And on the third day l emerged bewildered, looking towards Dijon 209 00:18:35,489 --> 00:18:37,949 and l realised we'd liberated Burgundy. 210 00:18:45,666 --> 00:18:49,043 (narrator) The poets saw beneath the skin. 211 00:18:49,128 --> 00:18:52,213 Vergissmeinnicht - Forget me not. 212 00:18:54,133 --> 00:18:57,260 "Three weeks gone and the combatants gone 213 00:18:57,344 --> 00:19:01,055 returning over the nightmare ground we found the place again, 214 00:19:01,140 --> 00:19:04,475 and found the soldier sprawling in the sun. 215 00:19:06,019 --> 00:19:08,855 The frowning barrel of his gun overshadowing. 216 00:19:08,939 --> 00:19:12,483 As we came on that day, he hit my tank with one 217 00:19:12,568 --> 00:19:15,444 like the entry of a demon. 218 00:19:15,529 --> 00:19:20,575 Look. Here in the gunpit spoil the dishonoured picture of his girl 219 00:19:20,659 --> 00:19:26,706 who has put: Steffi. Vergissmeinnicht. in a copybook gothic script. 220 00:19:28,041 --> 00:19:35,590 We see him almost with content, abased, and seeming to have paid and mocked at 221 00:19:35,674 --> 00:19:40,011 by his own equipment that's hard and good when he's decayed. 222 00:19:41,597 --> 00:19:46,684 But she would weep to see today how on his skin the swart flies move; 223 00:19:46,768 --> 00:19:49,187 the dust upon the paper eye 224 00:19:49,271 --> 00:19:52,773 and the burst stomach like a cave. 225 00:19:52,858 --> 00:19:55,526 For here the lover and killer are mingled 226 00:19:55,611 --> 00:19:58,404 who had one body and one heart. 227 00:19:58,488 --> 00:20:04,368 And death who had the soldier singled has done the lover mortal hurt. 228 00:20:08,332 --> 00:20:11,792 Remember the war poet, Keith Douglas, 229 00:20:11,877 --> 00:20:14,754 killed in Normandy in 1944. 230 00:20:19,718 --> 00:20:22,511 Away from the front, beyond the battle, 231 00:20:22,596 --> 00:20:26,390 the soldiers came and went as strangers. 232 00:20:26,475 --> 00:20:29,435 (Gray) After a few weeks in the line, 233 00:20:29,519 --> 00:20:33,898 l got away one afternoon and climbed up into the Apennines 234 00:20:33,982 --> 00:20:36,901 and met the old hermit. 235 00:20:36,985 --> 00:20:39,153 We sat down and began to talk, 236 00:20:39,279 --> 00:20:43,574 and of course the artillery in the valley below opened up 237 00:20:43,659 --> 00:20:46,619 and he began to ask me questions about the war. 238 00:20:46,703 --> 00:20:51,207 And l gradually became aware that he didn't know what was going on. 239 00:20:51,291 --> 00:20:54,877 My attempts to explain what was going on faltered, 240 00:20:54,962 --> 00:20:59,966 not only because of my... rather poor ltalian, 241 00:21:00,050 --> 00:21:05,471 but because l suddenly realised that l couldn't possibly explain to him... 242 00:21:06,640 --> 00:21:12,478 why Americans, Britishers, were fighting in ltaly against Germans 243 00:21:12,604 --> 00:21:14,855 with ltalians on both sides. 244 00:21:14,940 --> 00:21:17,566 lt seemed an impossible task. 245 00:21:17,693 --> 00:21:20,987 Even had he been speaking my own language, 246 00:21:21,071 --> 00:21:26,534 l wouldn't have been able to tell him what the war was about, 247 00:21:26,618 --> 00:21:29,203 because l didn't really know myself, 248 00:21:29,288 --> 00:21:32,665 in any deeper sense, what the war was about. 249 00:21:40,257 --> 00:21:46,512 ln a sense, the people l fought with in the war were, in my view, all heroes, 250 00:21:46,596 --> 00:21:49,098 in the sense that they were... 251 00:21:49,182 --> 00:21:52,601 tremendous believers in what we were trying to do. 252 00:21:52,686 --> 00:21:57,273 There was an amazing spirit of dedication to the task in hand. 253 00:21:57,357 --> 00:22:02,361 This was very moving, and a tremendous inspiration. 254 00:22:02,446 --> 00:22:05,865 Whose idea it was, of course, you can never trace, 255 00:22:05,949 --> 00:22:07,658 but it was a sort of infection. 256 00:22:07,743 --> 00:22:10,286 This applied to people from all over the world, 257 00:22:10,370 --> 00:22:15,207 and Bomber Command was an extraordinarily cosmopolitan command. 258 00:22:15,292 --> 00:22:17,376 l think, by the time l was in it, 259 00:22:17,461 --> 00:22:20,963 about 40% of it came from overseas, 260 00:22:21,048 --> 00:22:23,716 mostly from New Zealand, Australia, Canada, 261 00:22:23,800 --> 00:22:27,762 but also from many other countries and not all, by any means, British. 262 00:22:27,846 --> 00:22:32,224 l mean, there were lots of Czechs and Poles serVing in Bomber Command. 263 00:22:32,309 --> 00:22:35,853 And the spirit of dedication was, as l say, moving. 264 00:22:35,937 --> 00:22:39,690 But where it really came from is something l've never understood. 265 00:22:39,775 --> 00:22:42,193 The task in hand inspired the idea. 266 00:22:42,277 --> 00:22:45,237 ln that sense, l think this was a heroic idea. 267 00:22:53,580 --> 00:22:56,582 lt's just now and again the nightmare in the night, 268 00:22:56,666 --> 00:22:58,751 where you just remember somebody who... 269 00:22:58,835 --> 00:23:01,295 You turn around on the deck of a destroyer 270 00:23:01,380 --> 00:23:03,881 and next minute he wasn't there. 271 00:23:03,965 --> 00:23:06,425 You know, he'd gone, swept away. 272 00:23:14,851 --> 00:23:16,560 Casualties were bad at any time, 273 00:23:16,645 --> 00:23:19,855 but particularly in the last two months of the war. 274 00:23:19,940 --> 00:23:24,443 There were men you'd been with for five years. They were not just colleagues. 275 00:23:24,528 --> 00:23:26,904 You were close. You knew all about them, 276 00:23:26,988 --> 00:23:31,283 and you saw them getting knocked oft in the last few days, particularly sad. 277 00:23:46,341 --> 00:23:51,762 "l am commanded by the Air Council to state that in view of the lapse of time 278 00:23:51,847 --> 00:23:55,891 and the absence of any further news regarding your husband, 279 00:23:56,017 --> 00:23:59,979 Acting Squadron Leader THD Drinkwater DFC, 280 00:24:00,063 --> 00:24:02,898 since the date on which he was reported missing, 281 00:24:02,983 --> 00:24:07,027 they must regretfully conclude that he has lost his life 282 00:24:07,154 --> 00:24:11,699 and his death had now been presumed for ofticial purposes 283 00:24:11,783 --> 00:24:17,204 to have occurred on the 18th of May, 1944." 284 00:24:24,212 --> 00:24:26,589 l don't think any of us were, you know, 285 00:24:26,673 --> 00:24:28,424 patriotic men in the sense 286 00:24:28,508 --> 00:24:32,887 that we would stand rigidly to attention and wave flags. 287 00:24:35,140 --> 00:24:40,019 We were just glad to be alive and, in some way, you know, 288 00:24:40,103 --> 00:24:44,648 we were rather proud that this kind of army we'd been in for so long, 289 00:24:44,733 --> 00:24:49,195 which had done so many daft things and where we'd been bellowed and shouted at 290 00:24:49,279 --> 00:24:52,781 and, uh, generally mucked around 291 00:24:52,866 --> 00:24:55,493 and spent thousands of hours on exercises 292 00:24:55,619 --> 00:24:59,246 and standing about in the rain and the mud and the snow, 293 00:24:59,331 --> 00:25:03,751 had finally managed to bring oft what, 294 00:25:03,835 --> 00:25:08,422 when you look at it in fairly cold light, was a pretty big adventure. 295 00:25:08,507 --> 00:25:11,550 (band plays "It's A Long Way To Tipperary") 296 00:25:26,942 --> 00:25:31,487 (Vaughan-Thomas) l couldn't understand why people went to Cenotaph ceremonies. 297 00:25:31,571 --> 00:25:36,617 l go now, and l'm proud to go, because l remember the people who didn't come back 298 00:25:36,701 --> 00:25:39,620 and out of it comes this terrible feeling in my mind 299 00:25:39,704 --> 00:25:44,250 of waste and yet of proud comradeship. 300 00:25:57,889 --> 00:26:01,225 You're lying in a trench and the shells come down. 301 00:26:01,309 --> 00:26:04,144 You're frightened to death. The chap next to you says: 302 00:26:04,271 --> 00:26:07,106 "Have a cigarette, mate. lt'll go. lt's like rain." 303 00:26:07,232 --> 00:26:09,316 You realise he's a better man than you. 304 00:26:09,401 --> 00:26:11,402 He's given you the strength to go on, 305 00:26:11,486 --> 00:26:14,321 and that is what you remember out of the war. 306 00:26:14,406 --> 00:26:16,991 lt's the comradeship. 307 00:26:40,974 --> 00:26:43,392 (narrator) Remember the comradeship, 308 00:26:43,476 --> 00:26:46,228 and remember the suftering. 309 00:26:49,024 --> 00:26:52,401 Another road, another village - 310 00:26:52,485 --> 00:26:54,570 same orders. 311 00:26:59,284 --> 00:27:01,327 Soldiers. 312 00:27:01,411 --> 00:27:04,413 Some seeing, not feeling, 313 00:27:04,497 --> 00:27:06,999 others enjoying their work. 314 00:27:16,051 --> 00:27:19,094 (Gray) lt's one of the melancholy aspects of human nature. 315 00:27:19,179 --> 00:27:25,684 You notice it with boys who love to break windows to hear the glass tinkle, 316 00:27:25,769 --> 00:27:30,105 but there are a great many soldiers 317 00:27:30,190 --> 00:27:33,025 who take a great pleasure 318 00:27:33,109 --> 00:27:35,861 in destroying people, 319 00:27:35,987 --> 00:27:38,072 wasting things. 320 00:27:46,665 --> 00:27:52,586 l find this aspect of human nature not discussed enough, 321 00:27:52,671 --> 00:27:56,465 but it is surely one of the causes of warfare. 322 00:28:22,075 --> 00:28:24,201 Remember the dead. 323 00:28:26,204 --> 00:28:31,208 ln the Second World War she started, Germany lost nearly five million dead. 324 00:28:31,292 --> 00:28:33,961 Two and a half million were killed in action, 325 00:28:34,045 --> 00:28:37,506 one and a half million died in Russian prison camps. 326 00:28:37,590 --> 00:28:42,052 Half a million German civilians died in Allied bombing raids, 327 00:28:42,137 --> 00:28:45,556 another half million at the war's end. 328 00:28:46,933 --> 00:28:51,270 Remember the dead and the scarred surVivors. 329 00:28:57,152 --> 00:29:00,195 (Frankland) The effect of war on people who take part in it 330 00:29:00,280 --> 00:29:03,031 is, of course, extremely various. 331 00:29:03,116 --> 00:29:07,870 Lots of people are maimed, completely, either mentally or physically. 332 00:29:07,954 --> 00:29:12,791 But l suppose the majority of those who surVive, surVive apparently intact. 333 00:29:12,876 --> 00:29:14,835 But there must be marked eftects, 334 00:29:14,919 --> 00:29:17,713 and in some ways the eftects are very good on people, 335 00:29:17,839 --> 00:29:21,717 because they feel that they've been able to fulfil themselves. 336 00:29:21,843 --> 00:29:26,555 A lot of people go through life without ever feeling a sense of fulfilment, 337 00:29:26,639 --> 00:29:30,142 but those who take part in hectic war operations 338 00:29:30,226 --> 00:29:32,227 usually get a sense of fulfilment, 339 00:29:32,312 --> 00:29:36,064 to some extent, especially if they believe in what they're trying to do, 340 00:29:36,149 --> 00:29:40,402 which l think in war people tend to do very readily. 341 00:29:40,487 --> 00:29:44,823 On the other hand, l think there are very bad eftects, obvious bad eftects. 342 00:29:44,908 --> 00:29:47,284 Perhaps one of the less obvious ones 343 00:29:47,368 --> 00:29:49,870 is that people who undertake these operations 344 00:29:49,954 --> 00:29:52,915 l think have a tendency to feel afterwards 345 00:29:52,999 --> 00:29:56,710 that society owes them something very special. 346 00:29:56,795 --> 00:30:01,423 And when the war is over, they tend to go home or back to where they came from 347 00:30:01,508 --> 00:30:04,635 and expect people to look up to them and to look after them, 348 00:30:04,719 --> 00:30:09,348 which is not what people are going to do at all, nor what people ought to do. 349 00:30:17,649 --> 00:30:19,733 Remember the mud. 350 00:30:19,818 --> 00:30:22,694 You get used to it, of course. 351 00:30:22,779 --> 00:30:25,280 You get used to anything... 352 00:30:27,742 --> 00:30:30,202 easily hardened to other suftering. 353 00:30:32,705 --> 00:30:35,916 (man) lt's a curious thing. You could equate it to television 354 00:30:36,000 --> 00:30:38,377 and what it's done to us, in many ways. 355 00:30:38,461 --> 00:30:40,796 The realities of the situation 356 00:30:40,880 --> 00:30:43,632 people are still wanting to sweep under the carpet. 357 00:30:43,716 --> 00:30:47,678 l turned round to my kids during the napalm bombing in Vietnam and l said: 358 00:30:47,762 --> 00:30:49,137 "Just don't sit there. 359 00:30:49,222 --> 00:30:53,308 "That is a real child, that burning torch running across a field." 360 00:30:53,393 --> 00:30:56,061 But it means nothing to them. 361 00:30:57,105 --> 00:31:02,192 (narrator) That is a real man scrambling for a potato, soon to starVe to death. 362 00:31:17,041 --> 00:31:19,167 Remember the dead. 363 00:31:20,295 --> 00:31:23,797 ln the Second World War, two and half million Japanese died. 364 00:31:23,882 --> 00:31:26,550 Among them, half a million civilians. 365 00:31:30,763 --> 00:31:33,140 Japanese fighting men fought to the death. 366 00:31:33,224 --> 00:31:38,687 Nearly 20 Japanese soldiers were killed for every one wounded or maimed. 367 00:31:40,106 --> 00:31:46,028 We had this orthopod, or orthopaedic surgeon, from Baltimore, 368 00:31:46,112 --> 00:31:52,075 and, uh... he gave me the definition that l've used all these many years 369 00:31:52,201 --> 00:31:56,330 of sympathy for the disability. 370 00:31:56,414 --> 00:31:58,957 He said, "Son, you know where you find sympathy?" 371 00:31:59,042 --> 00:32:03,629 He said, "You find it in the dictionary between 'Shit' and 'Syphilis'." 372 00:32:03,713 --> 00:32:06,590 And l've remembered that all these many years. 373 00:32:17,977 --> 00:32:20,729 Remember the civilians who got in the way. 374 00:32:21,981 --> 00:32:25,233 You could miss seeing them from a bomber, 375 00:32:25,318 --> 00:32:28,445 but on the ground the soldiers knew. 376 00:32:31,449 --> 00:32:36,495 (Gray) One of the things that seemed to me to cause most guilt in World War ll 377 00:32:36,579 --> 00:32:41,875 was this failure to discriminate between combatants and non-combatants. 378 00:32:41,960 --> 00:32:46,672 l felt, even then, as many other soldiers did, 379 00:32:46,756 --> 00:32:52,177 that we were guilty of indiscriminate terroristic bombing. 380 00:32:52,261 --> 00:32:58,225 Many soldiers had to kill innocent women and children, non-combatants. 381 00:33:03,606 --> 00:33:06,692 ln this sense, there is such a thing as collective guilt 382 00:33:06,776 --> 00:33:11,321 insofar as this decision was made at the highest levels 383 00:33:11,406 --> 00:33:14,408 and approved by many people, 384 00:33:14,492 --> 00:33:17,661 both soldiers and... and civilians. 385 00:33:27,880 --> 00:33:30,507 (narrator) Remember the dead. 386 00:33:30,591 --> 00:33:35,220 ln the Second World War, America was not invaded or even bombed, 387 00:33:35,304 --> 00:33:38,932 but the United States lost 300,000 fighting men, 388 00:33:39,058 --> 00:33:42,769 killed in action far from home. 389 00:33:45,273 --> 00:33:47,733 Well, what l found when l came home, 390 00:33:47,817 --> 00:33:51,278 and l've been rather disgusted with myself ever since, 391 00:33:51,362 --> 00:33:53,905 was that, uh... 392 00:33:54,991 --> 00:33:58,493 the readjustment to their kind of life, 393 00:33:58,578 --> 00:34:02,122 the life that l led before myself, 394 00:34:02,248 --> 00:34:04,416 was virtually impossible, 395 00:34:04,500 --> 00:34:09,296 because however much you hate being in a war, 396 00:34:09,380 --> 00:34:12,382 the things that you come back to seem very, very trivial. 397 00:34:12,467 --> 00:34:16,762 Reporting the council talking about a new gents' lavatory, things like this, 398 00:34:16,846 --> 00:34:19,181 don't seem to matter at all. 399 00:34:19,265 --> 00:34:22,476 And, of course, these things matter to the people around you. 400 00:34:22,560 --> 00:34:26,688 And l shut up, l shut myself in, for about a year. 401 00:34:26,773 --> 00:34:30,067 l must have behaved extremely badly, l'm well aware of it. 402 00:34:30,151 --> 00:34:33,862 And l've never forgotten it, and l've never ceased to feel sorry for it, 403 00:34:33,946 --> 00:34:38,033 because it must have made life pretty intolerable for the people around me. 404 00:34:38,117 --> 00:34:42,329 But it was just that l couldn't... l couldn't... communicate. 405 00:34:42,413 --> 00:34:44,831 l had lost my sense of communication 406 00:34:44,916 --> 00:34:48,043 with the people that l had known for all those years, 407 00:34:51,005 --> 00:34:56,760 because l had begun to understand an entirely new breed of people 408 00:34:56,844 --> 00:35:00,764 who were all thrown together, um... 409 00:35:00,848 --> 00:35:02,766 in a common thing. l think that was it. 410 00:35:07,480 --> 00:35:10,774 (narrator) More roads to more villages. 411 00:35:10,858 --> 00:35:13,443 More orders to obey. 412 00:35:18,157 --> 00:35:22,119 "Corporal, take two men and clear the village." 413 00:35:22,203 --> 00:35:25,497 "Leave the men behind for now." 414 00:35:25,581 --> 00:35:28,625 "Move the women and children." 415 00:35:28,709 --> 00:35:33,505 "Corporal, hurry the goodbyes up, will you?" 416 00:36:21,304 --> 00:36:24,764 (Gray) l think it has taught me, all the rest of my life, 417 00:36:24,849 --> 00:36:30,020 that there is a line which a man dare not cross, 418 00:36:30,104 --> 00:36:36,109 a line which separates the reasonably just and human 419 00:36:36,194 --> 00:36:39,070 from the mere functionary. 420 00:37:06,098 --> 00:37:11,394 (narrator) The corporal and the soldiers have wives and children too. 421 00:37:29,872 --> 00:37:33,250 Remember the Russian dead. 422 00:37:33,334 --> 00:37:36,836 ln the Second World War, the Soviet Union, already bled by Stalin, 423 00:37:36,921 --> 00:37:39,839 lost... 20 million dead. 424 00:37:39,924 --> 00:37:43,218 Millions in action on Russian soil - 425 00:37:43,302 --> 00:37:45,762 the bloody defeats of '41 and '42, 426 00:37:45,846 --> 00:37:49,349 the bloody victories of '43 and '45. 427 00:37:51,936 --> 00:37:54,854 And millions of prisoners of war died in German hands, 428 00:37:54,939 --> 00:37:58,900 deprived of food, clothing, shelter. 429 00:37:58,985 --> 00:38:02,696 For these prisoners, no escape. 430 00:38:02,780 --> 00:38:04,781 About a million were shot. 431 00:38:04,865 --> 00:38:09,619 And millions of Russian civilians died from shooting, bombing, shelling, 432 00:38:09,704 --> 00:38:14,291 forced winter marches, engineered starVation. 433 00:38:14,417 --> 00:38:16,710 20th-century total war. 434 00:38:38,107 --> 00:38:40,400 Remember the Russian dead... 435 00:38:41,444 --> 00:38:43,570 the 20 million. 436 00:38:54,540 --> 00:38:57,542 Soldiers, remember the dead. 437 00:38:58,669 --> 00:39:00,795 Remember all the others. 438 00:39:03,007 --> 00:39:08,720 15 million Chinese died in the Second World War, most from starVation. 439 00:39:08,804 --> 00:39:13,266 And in occupied Europe, more than a million and a half Yugoslavs died 440 00:39:13,351 --> 00:39:16,561 for a country that never stopped fighting. 441 00:39:16,645 --> 00:39:21,983 And three million Poles and more than five million Jews. 442 00:39:22,068 --> 00:39:26,738 And over half a million Frenchmen and women, many in the Resistance. 443 00:39:26,822 --> 00:39:32,869 And brave men and women in Norway and Holland and Denmark and Belgium. 444 00:39:32,953 --> 00:39:35,622 And hundreds of thousands in Czechoslovakia, 445 00:39:35,706 --> 00:39:39,042 Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary. 446 00:39:39,168 --> 00:39:41,711 And over 300,000 Greeks. 447 00:39:41,796 --> 00:39:43,505 And half a million ltalians 448 00:39:43,589 --> 00:39:47,926 in a country that was fought over and fought on both sides. 449 00:39:48,010 --> 00:39:52,389 And Spaniards in Russia and lndians in Burma. 450 00:39:52,473 --> 00:39:55,308 Remember them all. 451 00:39:55,393 --> 00:39:58,895 55 million dead. 452 00:40:03,818 --> 00:40:07,904 "l did not know death had undone so many." 453 00:40:09,990 --> 00:40:12,075 Mothers and daughters, 454 00:40:12,159 --> 00:40:14,786 fathers and sons. 455 00:40:44,775 --> 00:40:48,486 The young are too young to remember, 456 00:40:48,571 --> 00:40:51,448 perhaps too young to understand. 457 00:40:53,325 --> 00:40:57,912 (Frankland) One of the great effects of war upon people who take part in it 458 00:40:57,997 --> 00:41:00,623 is the extent to which it tends to cut them oft 459 00:41:00,708 --> 00:41:04,794 from both their elders and their own children. 460 00:41:04,879 --> 00:41:08,423 And, um, the same thing applies, in a difterent way, 461 00:41:08,507 --> 00:41:10,508 as between a father and a son. 462 00:41:10,593 --> 00:41:15,430 l mean, l feel this myself in my own relationship with my parents 463 00:41:15,514 --> 00:41:18,308 at the time of the war and with my children today, 464 00:41:18,392 --> 00:41:22,937 that, in a sense, they neither can nor wish to envisage 465 00:41:23,022 --> 00:41:25,607 the circumstances in which we lived in the war. 466 00:41:25,691 --> 00:41:30,653 And we have a rather arrogant feeling that they ought to wish to understand 467 00:41:30,738 --> 00:41:33,698 these dreadful things that happened, but they don't. 468 00:41:33,782 --> 00:41:37,494 And this cuts one oft both from the older and the younger generation. 469 00:41:37,578 --> 00:41:40,705 People are, in any case, cut oft from these generations. 470 00:41:40,789 --> 00:41:44,167 There is a generation gap under any circumstances, 471 00:41:44,251 --> 00:41:47,921 but l think war, as in so many other aspects of life, 472 00:41:48,005 --> 00:41:51,549 tends to emphasise those sort of considerations, 473 00:41:51,634 --> 00:41:56,596 and very much so in creating and nourishing a generation gap. 474 00:41:56,680 --> 00:41:58,765 (♪ fairground music) 475 00:42:11,862 --> 00:42:13,947 (narrator) Nuremberg. 476 00:42:14,698 --> 00:42:20,036 Here on this ground, Adolf Hitler spoke to the National Socialist Party 477 00:42:20,120 --> 00:42:23,122 and to the German nation, 40 years ago. 478 00:42:29,880 --> 00:42:33,299 40 years on, West Germany's chancellor, 479 00:42:33,384 --> 00:42:37,387 twice elected by popular vote, is Willy Brandt. 480 00:42:39,014 --> 00:42:42,642 Brandt was a traitor to Hitler's Germany. 481 00:42:42,726 --> 00:42:46,062 He fought in the Norwegian Resistance. 482 00:42:47,064 --> 00:42:50,858 ln Warsaw, as in Jerusalem, 483 00:42:50,943 --> 00:42:52,986 he remembers the dead. 484 00:42:58,325 --> 00:43:00,910 Of all Germans alive today, 485 00:43:00,995 --> 00:43:05,665 half were not born when the Second World War began. 486 00:43:11,422 --> 00:43:14,257 (Drinkwater) We have things to remember him by. 487 00:43:14,341 --> 00:43:17,927 We've got one here from Buckingham Palace. 488 00:43:18,012 --> 00:43:23,933 "The Queen and l ofter you our heartfelt sympathy in your great sorrow." 489 00:43:24,018 --> 00:43:28,438 "We pray that your country's gratitude for a life so nobly given 490 00:43:28,522 --> 00:43:33,443 in its serVice may bring you some measure of consolation." 491 00:43:42,953 --> 00:43:46,623 (man reads roll of honour) 1939-45. 492 00:43:46,707 --> 00:43:50,418 E Bickerstone, J Curtis, 493 00:43:50,502 --> 00:43:54,255 E Fraser, L Humphrey, 494 00:43:54,340 --> 00:43:57,800 G Nixon, A Schofield, 495 00:43:57,885 --> 00:44:01,721 L Chandler, A Flower, 496 00:44:01,805 --> 00:44:05,558 S Horan, C Nixon... 497 00:44:13,233 --> 00:44:15,568 (bugle plays the Last Post) 498 00:45:11,041 --> 00:45:14,168 (narrator) They were very young. 499 00:45:14,253 --> 00:45:17,130 They did not ask to die as heroes. 500 00:45:20,843 --> 00:45:25,012 They would rather have lived for those that loved them, 501 00:45:25,097 --> 00:45:27,390 those they loved. 502 00:45:57,796 --> 00:46:01,382 (Drinkwater) And this was the last letter he ever wrote to his wife... 503 00:46:01,467 --> 00:46:04,844 "Darling, let me tell you again l love you." 504 00:46:04,928 --> 00:46:11,058 "This past weekend has made me so pleased that you are my wife 505 00:46:11,143 --> 00:46:14,020 because l am so in love with you 506 00:46:14,104 --> 00:46:17,648 and l know l shall love you for the rest of my life." 507 00:46:17,733 --> 00:46:21,360 "And darling, thank you for loving me." 508 00:46:21,445 --> 00:46:26,032 "My sweet, l am sure you have got something belonging to me 509 00:46:26,116 --> 00:46:30,912 because l am always so happy when l am with you, 510 00:46:30,996 --> 00:46:36,083 but as soon as we are apart, l just go as flat as can be." 511 00:46:36,168 --> 00:46:41,547 "l am like a man with no brain, but only a memory for you." 512 00:46:41,632 --> 00:46:44,759 "Oh, darling, it is terrible." 513 00:46:44,843 --> 00:46:48,179 "Please don't think l am sloppy or stupid, 514 00:46:48,263 --> 00:46:52,391 though l may be, but l just can't get over it." 515 00:46:52,476 --> 00:46:55,561 "Perhaps l am a bit tired tonight, 516 00:46:55,687 --> 00:46:59,232 and after a night's rest l shall be better 517 00:46:59,316 --> 00:47:03,277 and able to write you a nice letter." 518 00:47:03,362 --> 00:47:06,364 "Anyway, l'll see." 519 00:47:06,448 --> 00:47:11,244 "l'm afraid, darling, my operational flying days are nearly over." 520 00:47:11,328 --> 00:47:15,706 "The wing commander has told me twice already this evening 521 00:47:15,791 --> 00:47:19,752 that l can't go on so many shows in future, 522 00:47:19,837 --> 00:47:22,839 and he is very concerned about it." 523 00:47:22,965 --> 00:47:27,468 "He said, 'Out of fairness to you and your wife, 524 00:47:27,553 --> 00:47:34,308 l don't intend for you to stay on ops much longer, even if you want to."' 525 00:47:34,393 --> 00:47:38,187 "You see, there was something in what l said." 526 00:47:38,272 --> 00:47:41,107 "But, hell, l am going to miss this life." 527 00:47:41,191 --> 00:47:43,651 "l have had over three years of it 528 00:47:43,735 --> 00:47:47,530 and the trouble is now that l know nothing else." 529 00:47:49,366 --> 00:47:52,827 "My sweet, l must oft to bed now." 530 00:47:52,911 --> 00:47:56,122 "l can hardly see what l'm writing." 531 00:47:56,248 --> 00:47:59,500 "l love you, my own precious darling, 532 00:47:59,585 --> 00:48:03,337 more than anything else in this world." 533 00:48:03,422 --> 00:48:05,840 "Yours forever, Tom." 534 00:48:51,094 --> 00:48:54,805 (narrator) At the village of Oradour-sur-Glane, 535 00:48:54,890 --> 00:48:57,350 the day the soldiers came, 536 00:48:57,434 --> 00:49:02,605 They killed more than 600 men, women and children. 537 00:49:05,817 --> 00:49:07,902 Remember. 407 00:51:22,573 --> 00:51:25,201 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 408 00:51:25,202 --> 00:51:29,202 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 409 00:51:29,203 --> 00:51:33,203 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 47265

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