Edmonton Journal

Veteran tearfully recalls Dutch liberation

`He becomes emotional and is at times unable to finish a story'

- NICK LEES nlees@postmedia.com

The German army had its back to the sea and Canadian 5th Division Bren-gun truck driver and mechanic Ray Lewis thought the Second World War in Europe was winding down.

“My friend and I were in the Netherland­s towards the end of the war in 1945 and had signed up to go on to action in the Pacific,” said Lewis, who grew up on a farm near Athabasca.

“One day we went up to this elevated railroad track and looked down to see a German tank maybe 500 yards away. We saw a puff of smoke and ducked immediatel­y, almost at the same time as a shell hit maybe 20 feet away.

“We went back to our base in the little northern town of Delfzijl and took our names off the Pacific list.”

Last week, 96-year-old Lewis told his story at the Kipnes Centre for Veterans after being honoured with other Second World War veterans for their service in helping liberate the Netherland­s from Nazi rule. Last year's 75th-anniversar­y liberation events were postponed because of the pandemic.

With a little help from his daughter, Dawn Miller, Lewis told his story about an incident that would have made anyone cautious.

At 17, and with his mother's resignatio­n, he had been able to join the Canadian Army on his third underage attempt. His driving and mechanical skills saw him head overseas at the age of 18 to join B.C'S Westminste­r Regiment in May 1944.

“I had never had a rifle in my hands, but I learned to drive a Bren-gun carrier,” he says. “We had a 30-calibre machine-gun mounted on the front and a

PIAT, a projector, infantry, antitank weapon.

“In Italy, I replaced a guy who had been killed in action. I was wounded by shrapnel and the fellow who took my place was killed. Another fellow who took his place was also killed.”

Returning to the regiment with his wounds still seeping, and changing the bandages himself, he was later posted to northern Holland with most of the Canadian Army.

Moving forward one day, checking to make sure a house offered no threat, a German with a Luger pistol appeared from a room.

“He called us comrades and seemed like a nice guy,” Lewis said. “Like the rest of us, he just wanted to go home.”

Miller said her father joined the Canadian ranks later in the war and subsequent­ly was one of the last to be repatriate­d from Holland.

“He tells of his unit giving a discarded uniform to a woman who remade it for her boy, and today he still relishes talking about how cute the youngster looked,” she said.

“What he did in the war really mattered to him. He becomes emotional and is at times unable to finish a story.”

Lewis returned to Canada before he was 21 and notes he legally couldn't vote or buy liquor.

CHILDREN'S THANKS

Dutch schoolchil­dren last week sent a letter of thanks to each of the 23 Canadian Second World War veterans living at the Kipnes Centre for their part in liberating their country from Nazi brutality in early May 1945.

At a ceremony at the centre, Honorary Lt. Col. Ralph Young of the South Alberta Light

Horse Regiment (SAR) saluted each recipient, while Jerry Bouma, the Netherland­s honourary consul in Edmonton, shook hands and congratula­ted each veteran.

“More than 7,600 Canadians lost their lives to free the Netherland­s,” Bouma said. “The Canadians fought in fierce battles while many Dutch people died of starvation when isolated German troops had their food supplies cut off and brutally turned on the people of the country they occupied.”

Young retraced the important role soldiers played in liberating the Netherland­s after the force had landed at Normandy's Juno Beach on D-day, June 6, 1944.

The South Alberta Light Horse Regiment, “with its roots dating back to 1885, is considered Alberta's regiment for its lengthy and distinguis­hed history and locations in Edmonton, Medicine Hat and Lethbridge,” he said.

“It successful­ly cleared the heavily-guarded Scheldt Estuaries near Antwerp to allow Allied ships to reach the important shipping port to provide critical supplies to support the advancing Allied armies.

“Further actions led it to the border of Germany and WW V-E Day victory on May 8, 1945.”

The Canadian RCAF had sought to relieve the densely populated area of Randstad, where some 18,000 Dutch civilians died of starvation and malnutriti­on when the Germans commandeer­ed food supplies.

“It is because of Canada's action during the war, which also included hosting the Dutch Royal Family in exile, that led our countries to the special relationsh­ip we enjoy today,” Bouma said.

It is no coincidenc­e the ceremony here was on May 5. That is Liberation Day in the Netherland­s, and in 2019, Canada proclaimed it Dutch Heritage Day.

 ?? GREG SOUTHAM ?? Honorary Lt. Col. Ralph Young of the South Alberta Light Horse Regiment salutes 99-year-old Tom Preston during a commemorat­ive event last week at the Dianne and Irving Kipnes Centre for Veterans. It honoured 23 Canadian soldiers living at the centre who helped liberate the Netherland­s in May 1945.
GREG SOUTHAM Honorary Lt. Col. Ralph Young of the South Alberta Light Horse Regiment salutes 99-year-old Tom Preston during a commemorat­ive event last week at the Dianne and Irving Kipnes Centre for Veterans. It honoured 23 Canadian soldiers living at the centre who helped liberate the Netherland­s in May 1945.
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