Episodes
Wednesday May 27, 2020
SS Caribou
Wednesday May 27, 2020
Wednesday May 27, 2020
The original sat in a musty filing cabinet in the Halifax office of The Canadian Press for years: a sheaf of rice paper, its first page scrawled with the words “Passed by Censor 1942” across the top, just above the typed “BULLETIN.”
It was dated Oct. 16 out of Sydney, N.S., the first news report of the sinking of the SS Caribou two days earlier at the hands of a German U-boat, U-69. The file had long since disappeared when I left CP in 2012....
Thursday May 21, 2020
Reginald Wise: Saviour of Easter Sunday, 1945
Thursday May 21, 2020
Thursday May 21, 2020
It was Easter Sunday and April Fool’s Day, 1945—the day that Corporal Reginald Wise, who was no fool and no martyr either, would cheat death. More than once.
Wise and the rest of his Royal Marine commandos were advancing on a German position in Northern Italy when a landmine took out a track on their lead tank and everything ground to a halt....
Wednesday May 13, 2020
The seizing of Europe’s bells
Wednesday May 13, 2020
Wednesday May 13, 2020
The bells that rang out across allied nations after the First World War ended what for many had been a four-year silence enforced by regulation in some places and imposed by confiscation in others.
In Germany and across Europe, tens of thousands of bronze bells—some imparting “the songs of the angels” since the 12th century—had been seized and melted down for arms and munitions...
Wednesday May 06, 2020
Ted Martens: Dutch resistance fighter
Wednesday May 06, 2020
Wednesday May 06, 2020
Ted Martens did whatever he could to derail the Nazi war machine while serving with the Dutch resistance during the Second World War—then the Nazi war machine derailed him, but only briefly.
Wednesday Apr 29, 2020
Ernie Verhulst (Part 1): A wide-eyed boy in Rotterdam, May 1940
Wednesday Apr 29, 2020
Wednesday Apr 29, 2020
Wednesday Apr 22, 2020
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
Tuesday Apr 07, 2020
Wednesday Apr 01, 2020
Tuesday Mar 24, 2020