Today is the 70th anniversary of VE Day. People throughout the allied territories were celebrating Victory in Europe, including huge crowds in London and Oxford. While England was celebrating, Charles Williams was taken to hospital on May 10th. He died there 5 days later.
Over the next week or so we are celebrating Charles Williams’ legacy–both his literary impact and his friendship with the Inklings. I thought it would be nice to begin with this great article by the Marion E. Wade Center. It shows a picture of the honourary degree Williams received from Oxford, as well as some of the story. If you don’t subscribe to the Wade Artifact of the Month, make sure you sign up now.
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It suddenly struck me as being like a sort of war-history ‘liturgical’ calendar for much of western Europe. Late in the evening of 9 May 1940, the German operation ‘Fall Gelb’ was put into action with Luxembourg being successfully invaded, and the first German troops trying to capture the bridge over the Maas (or Meuse) between Germany and the Netherlands at Roermond in the night between 9 and 10 May: the defending troops blew it up at around 3:50 a.m. on 10 May, and the invasion began in full about 10 minutes later, I just read in an article about the unveiling of a new monument to commemorate it, with one of the soldiers who blew it up, Johan Jessen, now 97, in attendance! By 14 May, the Dutch surrendered, by 27 May, the Belgians, while the evacuation of Allied troops to England began. And so the 70th anniversary of VE Day is followed by the 75th anniversary of the beginning of the invasion and occupation of the Low Countries and France, or, looked at the other way round, that war-historical year begins with invasion on 9 May to end with Victory on the following 8 May.
I didn’t catch the parallels! We don’t hear as much about the Dutch experience in the American media, but Canada has a special affinity to the Dutch as one of the liberating armies.
Actually, you may even notice I got the date wrong, that Friday was the 8th! Oh well.
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