Daily Post - 27.09.1941, Side 2

Daily Post - 27.09.1941, Side 2
2 DAILY POST A Jerseyman, his Home Occupied by Germans, Compares the Situation in the Channel Isles and Iceland. Islands of Parsdise By Sgt. “Victor” ■JV/T UCH has been written of the fall of the great French Army and the mysteries surronding the dynamic collapse of our strongest ally. We have been told much of the subjugation of the peoples of Poland, Holland, Belgium and Norway and of the existing conditions in these coun- tries. Full well we know what occupation by the Nazis signifies. DAILY POST is published by Blaðahringuriiw. Editors: S. Benediktsson. Sgt. J. I. McGhie. Office: 12. Austurstræti, Tel. 3715, Reykjavík. Printed by Alþýðuprentsmiðj an. Saturday, Sept. 27, 1941 A Timely Word Mr. Ernest Bevin, the Minister of Laibuur, iin a speeoh yestierday saád: “We oan'nof have a oom- fohtaible war; although many people expect us to give it tihem.“ Tbis is a. timely r©buke directed agaiinst yhe many armchair critics of this war. It is not a pleasant thing to have had to say after twio years of t,he most brutal aind bloody warfare in the history of mankind. With the wjhole of Euirope umder the N.a,zi heel. and Riussia figihting for her lilfe against the redoulDÍed maaiacal efforts of the Naizis, it i's incínedibie that there sihould be people who arie selfish enougih to expeot their normal dreatui''e oomforts, tiheir normal uindistorbed oomfortable uiays of living, in their nioe warm Dom- fortable honues, while the major- it\r of the youtng men of our natiion are wbencílied from their homes and their comforts, and are uindergoinig the trials of war- fare from tfhe buirning sands of Egypt to the frigid clime of Iceland. Y(et Mr. Bevim ha,s foumd it reoessary to say a fewi iwords to tíhe soft-skinned comfort-loving ftolk. Honouir to Mr. Bevin; siucb petople ane not truly patr:otic In total wiar total sacrifiloe is essen- tial. The people he is referrihg to belong to tlhat claiss who imagine fhat by sitting bacik and resting we slhall enjoy the pleas- ant prospect of Ruissia and Ger- many canioelling eacb other out, and leaving Britain the master of Euirope. Sudh a view1 is criminal folly, and the reoent stress whiicb all ouir leaders have plaoed on the neoessity of quiidk aid to Russia, plainly shows the real- istic view 'of events iwbiich the Government acoepts. R'ussiia’s plight is dire, and we must do, and are doing all in our power to help her. South African troops have been for four months at Mersa Matruh and taken active part in patrolling the frontier. The tri®kery and under-hamd methods of the dreaded Gestapo Í9 houshold tolik both here and in the British Isles, but what is happening in those “Islands of Paradise“ off the norih ooast of Fi'a.nce? I refer, of oourse, to the Ch.annel Islamds — my home — now the loot of the aggressor. * This bitter war has brought upon us hardships and privatitons During the past two years — I speak as a soldier of Britain — we have oome to understand fuily the meaning of the word “liberty". Liberty, freedom ofthe press, and the right to voice our feeelings on any subject whether piolftical or otherwise, is ours and always iw'ill be. This freedom was just as evi- dent in peaoe-loviing Jersey. Any one of the thousands of holiday- makets who visited the Channel Islands oould hardly fai] to be impressed by that. And there must be quite a number of soldi- ers and airman over here who have at some time or other had oonnections wlith those iSlands of the free. * The ocicupation of Jersey by the Nazis and the entry of British for,ctes into Itoeland there- fiore furnishe some rather int- eresting comparisons. I certainly find myself in a unusual posit- iiou. Here I am, a member of a sio-oalled army of occupatiion, many miles fnom my home where tio-day the Germams dominate a,ffairs of state. INTIMIDATIO'N In June, 1940, the savage hun, fresh from oonquest, took it into his head to relaase a few miss- iles of destruction upon Jersey and Guemsey. He was using his familiar fntimidation methods to impress Upon the inhabitants that they wei'e at his mercy. Orders were issued to the States of Jers- ey by the Germaus that at a oertain hour bombers of the Reidi wtould pass over the town of St. Helier amd also over the air- piori at St. Peter. At that appo- inted hour the white flags of surrender wiould have to be fly- ing fnom speaified buildings, or the island wiould be subjecied to rirthless bombing. We know the result of fhat threat. There was no alternative but t'O evacuate as many of the landers who' wished to leaveand amd aliow' the Germans to take over. They flocked in by sea amd air and gloated over the townsfolk by parading the streets wdth military bands and singing Nazi siongs. * What them of the British octo- upaition of Iceland? Did we Use any stt|ch intimidation methods and threaten to throw do-wto de- ath and destruction from the skies? For qmite a. while the Germans in Jersey resitricted the use of wfireiess receivi'ng sets- The is- landers were forbidden to listen to the English programmes — douf punishment for a people who had looked Upon the radio as their chief forin of enterta- ment. The Icelanders have never been so moch ps requested to re- frain frorn listening to any parti- oular rad'o station. They realise by now/ iwhich istheir most trust- worihy source of i'nformation de- spite the attempts by Beriin, Hamburg, Breslau and Bremen to oonvince the inhabitants that the British are up to mö good. TONGUE-TIED The Icelanders need never fe- ar that their oonversations are being probed by British agents. Could the same freedom of speech be experieniqed in Jersey ? Personally the visions of the con- oentration camp would he my tomgue in the str©ets of St. Hel' ier were I there to-day. Let us dwell for a moment on the qujestion of trade and employ. The Jersey farmer, re- noiwned throughouí the civili'sed workl for his knowlledge of the land, his breeding of cattle and his potato and tomato crops has laid down everything he has for the improvement of his produoe and the widening of markets. Our American friends over here are surely acquainted with the numerous herds of Jersey cattle which have been shipped f113111 the Channel Islands to the U. S• A» * This same farmer is now ord- ered to carry on with his normal hard work and surrender his produce to the Nazis who PaY him a very meagre wieekly weg® fo.r his labours. This is but one branche of emplovment in the Channel Islands, but can the same be said over here? Is the foelander robbed in this way? Has the farmer, the shopkeeper, the builder, the fisherman or any other Iceland worker been im' posed upon in an umfair manner? Again it is not n-eoessan,' to gi'’e an answer; it is obvious to anv' one walking through the streets of Reykjavik. Th©re are thousands like my' self whose thoughts and goa^ Údings go out aeross the sea to those in the Channel Islands who a,ne living .for the day deliveranoe from the yoke of the Nazi leeoh- RADIO NEW8 Sunday: Force Orchestra with Guest Artistes, News Suto' mary anö “your” Request .i.’ -r-. ' :v-£,r:-i ... •>: f ***& ***/' —r , Di'y Cleaning and DyeinS- (Next door to “Liverpool ;

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