Humanity Over Conflict
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Freddy Zukiwsky our stretcher bearer and I had quite a little
show there a day or so later. We helped a baby being born.
Went in the next house there young woman there, they asked if we
could help but we had no medical officer. Never asked...
Well Freddy was a stretcher bearer but he never took any training
on it really. He just didn't want to shoot anybody that was all.
So he went over and I had read a, not read, I had looked at
pictures of childbirth in a book I seen a while before. So Freddy
said it must be like, farmers, it must be something like animals.
So we go and see. So we went over and helped her anyway.
And it was only a few days after that we pulled away from there,
and about a month later we went back through and a lot of the
German civilians were out there then. And this young woman there,
yelling, "Where's Freddy? Where's Tommy? Where's Freddy?"
And anyway, we figured she meant us like that, we didn't
recognize her. She's holding up, "Baby, baby!" And we finally got
up to the front of the trucks like that there, or got out at the
back like that, she'd named the baby after us. So I got a baby,
I haven't got a baby, I have a name on a German baby somewhere
if he's still living. So has Freddy. It was quite a thing, it was
quite an experience too. It was kind of nice to see life amongst
other Nazis. And I met a friendly German one time too, a German
soldier. When we were at Nijmegen you saw an occasional jack
rabbit, Belgian hair. And we stayed out in the brick yard quite
a bit of the time, that was a nice warm place in there, like
sheltered. But I went out after jack rabbits one day, and I shot
a jack rabbit. I stepped over this fence, went into the field to
get him, I went to pick him up and a gall dam bullet hit the
ground beside him. And I looked up like that and there's a German
standing up, he's quite a long ways away. Still had me cleared
out, we had kind of at a peace with each other at the time,
not too much to him. I went to reach the rabbit again he shot
again, right about the same place. I said to myself, "He wants
that darn rabbit that bad he can have it." So I head out again,
back and stepped over this fence and I happened to look back you
know to one side nice little sign, "Mine field." I was into it,
and he warned me. And anyway I guess I was lucky, cause we had
quite a bit of rain and thawing at that time, I guess maybe six
inch of water I guess was froze over. I might have got blown up.
But he never shot me, he shot beside the rabbit, he was a
good shot too because he could have picked me off.
Description
Mr. Tomlin describes two personal events where humanity won out over conflict.
Glen Tomlin
Mr. Tomlin was born in Clinton, Ontario, in 1923. His family moved to Harriston when he was very young. Once he was old enough he worked in a box factory earning $7/week for 60 hours of labour. Despite having had rheumatic fever, which made it impossible for him to walk at a marching pace, Mr. Tomlin was accepted by the army, where he trained as a field gunner. He later switched to infantry, joining the Hard Light Infantry, 9th Brigade, 3rd Canadian Division. Mr. Tomlin's service saw him in several combats in Northern Europe, often engaging the enemy at very close quarters. Mr. Tomlin now resides in Palmerston, Ontario.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:41
- Person Interviewed:
- Glen Tomlin
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Battle/Campaign:
- Rhine
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Highland Light Infantry
- Rank:
- Private
- Occupation:
- Gunner
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