The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Page 5

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Page 5
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 3 V. <£. 3)ay, Tuesday, May 8, was V. E. Day—victory over Europe. On that day and the day before, when the unconditional surrender of Germany flashed across the radio waves all over the world, there was rejoicing and exultation. There were sighs of relief. On those two days, but more espec- ially on the following Sunday, there were prayers and solemn thanksgiving. Now that the tumult and the shouting is over and the prayers have been said and the thanksgiving expressed we ask ourselves: what did V. E. day mean? Was it really a day of victory, only a day of victory, or was it something else? After we had heard Mr. Churchill we finally realized how close we came to defeat, not once but twice, during the war. We knew how narrow the margin was in 1940-41, when the people of Britain, with the aid of the overseas dominions, stood alone in the island fortress and kept the foe at bay. Now we know that if the V-l andV-2 rockets and flying bombs had been ready a few months earlier (the Air Force caused the delay) and if the new U-boat fleet and the multiple long range artillery had got into action, not only would London and other British cities have been destroyed but there would have been no D day, and without it we could not have had a V. E. day. It is well that we pause and reflect upon what would have happened if Germany had won. Hitler always maintained that Denmark and Norway were the ideal countries to be taken under the protection of the Nazis. After all, he said, these nations were of the same blood. They were Nordics. They had to be treated kindly, given a place next to the Superior Race, the Germans. Only now, after we have heard the stories as told by Haakon Lie of Norway and Capt. Peter Freuchen of Denmark, and as other authentic evidence is reaching us, do we realize the fate of the most favored nations under the Nazi heel. A similar fate awaited Britain and would have awaited us had there been defeat instead of victory in Europe. In the past, news filtered through about tortures and designed starvation in the countries a grade lower in the Nazi scheme—Belgium and Holland. But even in our blackest moments we could not picture what actually took place at Amersort and other concentration camps in Holland. We think of the countries and the races at the bottom of the list, the Poles, the Czecho-'Slovaks and the Jews—four millions killed at Oswiecim; gas chambers; rows of furnaces; men, women and even children buried alive. We read of planned and studied tortures at Buchenwald. We hear of

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