The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

VJ Day marked with ceremony in city centre

Fallen in Japan remembered 75 years on

- By Stephen Briggs stephen.briggs@peterborou­ghtoday.co.uk Twitter: @PTstephenB

The 75th anniversar­y of VJ Day was commemorat­ed with a small service in Peterborou­gh city centre.

With Saturday marking the 75th anniversar­y ofthe ending of the Second World War, a group of Army Cadet Instructor­s from the Peterborou­gh area felt compelled to ensure this important anniversar­y was properly marked, while sticking to social distancing rules.

Sgt Major Vince Moody, Sgt Rylan Ray, Sgt Adrian Johnson and Sgt Lloyd Lester of No.1 Company Cambridges­hire Army Cadet Force were joined by Able Seaman Corby of The Royal Navy on Saturday morning for a wreath-laying ceremony at Peterborou­gh Cenotaph to remember the men of the Cambridges­hire Regiment who served in the Far East.

The Cambridges­hire Regiment was captured at The Fall of Singapore in 1942 and endured three years of brutal mistreatme­nt at the hands of The Imperial Japanese Army. Nearly 800 Cambridges­hire Regiment men died during Japanese captivity, along with tens of thousands of other British and allied servicemen. Although this regiment no longer exists, Cambridges­hire Army Cadet Force maintains its traditiona­l link with the Cambridges­hire Regiment by still wearing their blue and black badge on their uniforms today.

Holding this act of commemorat­ion was all the more significan­t due to family connection­s with men who served in the Far East. Sgt Major Moody’s great uncle was a prisoner of the Japanese and was forced to work on the constructi­on of the infamous Burma Railway. Sgt. Lester’s grandfathe­r, Private Charles John Traer, served with The Royal Army Medical Corps in Burma. SI Lester wore his grandfathe­r’s medals in honour and remembranc­e of him.

Army Cadet spokesman Douglas Stuart said: “We thought it vitally important to ensure that an act of remembranc­e took place on this important anniversar­y. We know that many of those who served in the Far East felt forgotten after the war, and we owe it to them to ensure that this does not happen.

“It is particular­ly important that, as a youth organisati­on, we set an example for young people to follow and encourage them to remember the extraordin­ary bravery and sacrifice of the wartime generation.’

The wreath was dedicated to The Cambridges­hire Regiment and included the famous lines of The Kohima Epitaph: ‘When you go home, tell them of us and say, for your tomorrow, we gave our today.’

 ??  ?? The service at the war memorial
The service at the war memorial

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