The Citizen (KZN)

D-Day vets shun title of heroes

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London – Donald, Ken and Henry wear their medals with pride, but reject the title of heroes even if they are among the last British veterans alive who took part in the D-Day landings in Normandy in June 1944.

The trio, all pushing 100 years or beyond, said their job now was to bear witness to history and tell the story of World War II to younger generation­s, as the country prepares for the 80th anniversar­y of the key military operation.

Despite the passing of the decades, their memories of those events remain precise and vivid.

Ken Hay, 98, set foot on Juno Beach in Courseulle­s-sur-Mer a few days after the first wave of soldiers landed on 6 June. “I should have been frightened. I don’t think we were. I’m no hero, I’m not trying to make myself one, but it was all part of the adventure,” he told AFP in London.

Tasked with advancing towards an inland observatio­n post, his unit was attacked from the rear by German soldiers and he was captured, along with four other members of his regiment.

He was then transporte­d by train to Poland with dozens of other prisoners and sent to work in a coal mine. But Russian troops advancing from the east forced the Germans to empty the camps, with the prisoners having to walk hundreds of kilometres west.

Hay was finally liberated by US troops and was repatriate­d by aeroplane two days before Victory in Europe Day – 8 May, 1945 – the date of the German surrender.

Henry Rice, also 98, was in charge of communicat­ions aboard the HMS Eastway landing ship, delivering equipment to the soldiers on shore at Normandy.

“I was 50% excited, 50% not sure,” he recalled. “For a young man, it was so big. So many ships.”

But his gaze clouded over at the memory of the thousands of men killed on the French beaches, including nearly 1 500 British on the first day. “The mental picture I have of men in the water, I don’t like to think of that,” he said.

After participat­ing in the Normandy landings, Rice served in the Mediterran­ean and in Asia, until the Japanese surrender that marked the end of the global war.

“I feel lucky” to have returned alive, he said. Compared to other veterans, “particular­ly those soldiers who had landed and survived, I feel petit”, he added.

Donald Howkins, 103, landed two days after D-Day, and recalled being “very frightened”.

He recalled: “The sea was pretty rough, the barge was going up and down. But when I was on the beach I was OK. You just carried on with what you’ve got to do.”

Asked about how he feels ahead of the 80th anniversar­y commemorat­ions, which many heads of state are expected to attend, he joked: “Too bloody old.”

Howkins has already gone to several events in Normandy, but will not go this year as he now uses a wheelchair. –

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