yes, *that* Dawn person ([info]dawn_guy) wrote,
@ 2008-11-10 20:06:00
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every inch a sailor
I don't know much about the merchant marines who served Canada in WW II. I remember hearing that they were denied recognition and benefits for decades after the war. I didn't pay a bunch of old and dead sailors any mind.

My dad was a corporal in the regular armed forces, a handsome young man to judge from old family photographs. He married my mum after the war, she left her job, and they settled down and raised a family. That was the story I knew through my childhood and adolescence.

Years afterward, my father called out a name my sister heard when he was recovering from one of his surgeries. The story came out over the following days, explaining the conservative woolen suit my mother had been married in: it hadn't been the first marriage for either of them. My father's first bride had decided to return to England and my mother's first husband had been a merchant marine lost at sea. I saw her amended birth certificate once, with that unfamiliar surname.

Years later, when I heard about the facility, I tried looking up that sailor's name (Jack something) on the Veterans' Affairs web site. No results. His name is on no Google search result page.

Jack was an immigrant to Canada. He served on a ship in the Atlantic. I think he was loved. He was lost at sea. That's pretty much all I know.

Tomorrow (now in some parts of the world) is Remembrance Day. I wonder how I can remember something I have never known.


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[info]lovecraftienne
2008-11-11 01:57 am UTC (link)
My grandfather was in the Merchant Marine (well, one of them, anyway; my father's stepfather, I never knew his bio father, who'd abandoned them to return to South Africa before he was born). I've always been as proud of him as of each of my grandparents, all of whom served in uniform:

- my dad's bio-father was a member of the SOE, parachuted into France as an operative helping the Resistance send downed fliers back to England (he spoke five languages, as my mother often reminds me, now that I do too);

- my dad's mother was in the Women's auxiliary to the RAF, working for Fighter Command as one of the women who helped track incoming attacks during the Battle of Britain;

- my mom's father was a career NCO, serving as an infantryman before the war and throughout, in France, North Africa, Palestine, and Northwest Europe;

- my mom's mother was a driver in the Women's Army Corps; she and my grandfather met and married in Belgium in early 1945;

- and my dad's stepfather, as I said, was in the Merchant Marine, making dozens of passages of the North Atlantic, sunk once and rescued, and went back out.

Each of them will be in my thoughts at the Waterloo Cenotaph tomorrow morning.

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