Graaff-Reinet Advertiser

Union honours war heroes past and present at ceremony

-

Union High School paused on Friday, 9 November, to pay respect on Remembranc­e Day, a memorial day observed in Commonweal­th countries to remember the members of the armed forces who have died on duty since World War I.

Remembranc­e Day is usually observed on 11 November to recall the official end of World War I on that date in 1918, as the major hostilitie­s of World War I were formally ended "at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month" of 1918 with the German signing of the Armistice.

Reverend Oriel Alby led the devotions, while the headmaster, William Pringle, spoke about the significan­ce of the day, and its relevance to the youth of today, and that now, thankfully, a great many South Africans, have no personal experience of war, no way of knowing the anguish of enforced separation, or the greater grief of separation­s made permanent. Pringle told the story of Old Unionite Lt. Victor De Kock RN, MBE, DSC, and MID, South Africa’s most decorated sailor.

He was born in Clarendon in 1919, matriculat­ed at Union High in Graaff-reinet and died at the age of 23 years having earned the highest of military honours.

He was the South African Navy’s most decorated war hero, the only officer to receive three awards for gallantry. He was one of four members of the Union High School 1937 first cricket team who were killed in action during the Second World War. Charles Maasdorp, head boy of the school in 1951, then played the Last Post and the Reveille while teacher Hanno Sparrius lowered and raised the national flag. Wreaths were laid by the head prefects, Jenna Mcnaughton and Peter Watermeyer, and by John Crankshaw on behalf of the Old Unionite Associatio­n.

"By this act of remembranc­e, we cherish and nurture this possession, their gift. We prove an understand­ing both of its value and its cost. We build a bridge across time. By recognisin­g both what has been lost to us and what has been gained, by renewing our pledge to remember, we declare, of all our fallen: 'They are not missing. They are here'," said a Union spokespers­on this week.

 ??  ?? Charles Maasdorp, head boy of the school in 1951, played the Last Post and the Reveille at Union High’s Remembranc­e Day celebratio­ns last Friday.
Charles Maasdorp, head boy of the school in 1951, played the Last Post and the Reveille at Union High’s Remembranc­e Day celebratio­ns last Friday.

Newspapers in Afrikaans

Newspapers from South Africa