Canadian sailors may finally get medals for Second World War service
Canadian sailors who braved dangerous Arctic waters and prowling German U-boats to deliver vital supplies to Soviet allies during the Second World War may finally receive a medal — thanks to the British government — for their distinctive contribution to victory.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, under pressure to give full recognition to those who served in the famed "Murmansk Run," which transported shipments of food, fuel and munitions to the besieged U.S.S.R. nearly 70 years ago, has acknowledged that U.K. veterans of the operation "missed out" on honours bestowed to soldiers in other theatres of the war and pledged to press for the striking of a new Arctic convoys medal.
That recognition is likely to flow to Canadian naval veterans of the 1939-45 war and to the merchant marine sailors they escorted on supply runs to Murmansk. The Arctic city was the Russian gateway east of Nazi-occupied Norway and became a life-sustaining supply link between the Soviets' western allies and Leningrad after the German invasion of the U.S.S.R. in June 1941.
The Russian government has, at various times over the past 20 years, honoured many of the Arctic convoy veterans with a commemorative medal expressing Moscow's deep gratitude for the sacrifices of British, Canadian and other Allied seamen who risked their lives to help the Soviet Union resist the German invasion.
The Canadian government, in fact, adopted a special protocol to permit veterans in this country to accept the Russian medal.
Then, in 2005, the British government issued an "Arctic Star" lapel badge to veterans of the Soviet supply operation. The decoration was presented to thousands of Allied sailors from the Second World War, including many Canadians who endured the Murmansk Run, but that honour fell short of full-medal status.
Last week, Conservative MP and veterans advocate Caroline Dinenage pressed her own leader in the Britain's House of Commons to commit to awarding medals to the dwindling number of survivors of the Arctic voyages. After months of lobbying on behalf of the Last Chance for Justice campaign, a coalition of British veterans of the Murmansk Run, Dinenage told Cameron "the time to act is now" to fully recognize the few hundred remaining servicemen, the youngest of whom are now in their mid-80s.
"Of course, you have to have proper rules here, but it seems to me that the important fact is that the people on the Arctic convoys served under incredibly harsh conditions," Cameron responded during parliamentary questions last week.
"There is a case for saying they have missed out," Cameron added. "Many of them are coming to the end of their lives and it would be good if we could do something more to recognize what they have done."
That pledge, said Canadian war historian Jack Granatstein, could lead to veterans in Canada receiving the British medal for their service in the Arctic convoys.
"What we did during World War II is that we used British medals," Granatstein told Postmedia News.
"My guess is that maybe if Britain decided to award a medal, then Canadians might adopt it."
A Department of Defence official also indicated that Canadian veterans of the Murmansk Run may be deemed eligible to receive the new British medal, just as they were when the Arctic Star emblem was issued in 2005.
A spokesman from Veterans Affairs Canada noted that Canadian sailors "who served in the Murmansk Run performed a valuable and heroic service" during the Second World War.
"Those who perished as a result of their service in the Arctic convoys are commemorated in the Second World War Book of Remembrance or the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance," spokesman Simon Forsyth added.
But he also noted "there is no Canadian medal or badge in recognition of those who specifically served in the Arctic convoys that re-supplied Russia" during the war.
Among the Royal Canadian Navy vessels involved in the Murmansk Run was HMCS Haida, now a museum ship anchored on the Lake Ontario shore at Hamilton, and fellow Canadian destroyers Huron, Iroquois, Athabaskan, Sioux and Algonquin.
Duane Duff, a B.C. historian who chronicled the Murmansk Run voyages of a Canadian warship in his book the Waskesiu: Canada's First Frigate, welcomed the British move to fully honour Allied veterans of the Arctic supply runs.
"If it does come about, I'm all for it," he told Postmedia News.
"These runs were so dangerous and bitterly cold. So much ice would form on the ship that the crew had to make sure they kept it clear, because if it formed on one side it could tip the ship."
(Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act)
Photo:
Undated handout photo of the Royal Canadian Navy destroyer HMCS Haida
Photograph by: Handout, via Postmedia News
Canadian sailors who braved dangerous Arctic waters and prowling German U-boats to deliver vital supplies to Soviet allies during the Second World War may finally receive a medal — thanks to the British government — for their distinctive contribution to victory.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, under pressure to give full recognition to those who served in the famed "Murmansk Run," which transported shipments of food, fuel and munitions to the besieged U.S.S.R. nearly 70 years ago, has acknowledged that U.K. veterans of the operation "missed out" on honours bestowed to soldiers in other theatres of the war and pledged to press for the striking of a new Arctic convoys medal.
That recognition is likely to flow to Canadian naval veterans of the 1939-45 war and to the merchant marine sailors they escorted on supply runs to Murmansk. The Arctic city was the Russian gateway east of Nazi-occupied Norway and became a life-sustaining supply link between the Soviets' western allies and Leningrad after the German invasion of the U.S.S.R. in June 1941.
The Russian government has, at various times over the past 20 years, honoured many of the Arctic convoy veterans with a commemorative medal expressing Moscow's deep gratitude for the sacrifices of British, Canadian and other Allied seamen who risked their lives to help the Soviet Union resist the German invasion.
The Canadian government, in fact, adopted a special protocol to permit veterans in this country to accept the Russian medal.
Then, in 2005, the British government issued an "Arctic Star" lapel badge to veterans of the Soviet supply operation. The decoration was presented to thousands of Allied sailors from the Second World War, including many Canadians who endured the Murmansk Run, but that honour fell short of full-medal status.
Last week, Conservative MP and veterans advocate Caroline Dinenage pressed her own leader in the Britain's House of Commons to commit to awarding medals to the dwindling number of survivors of the Arctic voyages. After months of lobbying on behalf of the Last Chance for Justice campaign, a coalition of British veterans of the Murmansk Run, Dinenage told Cameron "the time to act is now" to fully recognize the few hundred remaining servicemen, the youngest of whom are now in their mid-80s.
"Of course, you have to have proper rules here, but it seems to me that the important fact is that the people on the Arctic convoys served under incredibly harsh conditions," Cameron responded during parliamentary questions last week.
"There is a case for saying they have missed out," Cameron added. "Many of them are coming to the end of their lives and it would be good if we could do something more to recognize what they have done."
That pledge, said Canadian war historian Jack Granatstein, could lead to veterans in Canada receiving the British medal for their service in the Arctic convoys.
"What we did during World War II is that we used British medals," Granatstein told Postmedia News.
"My guess is that maybe if Britain decided to award a medal, then Canadians might adopt it."
A Department of Defence official also indicated that Canadian veterans of the Murmansk Run may be deemed eligible to receive the new British medal, just as they were when the Arctic Star emblem was issued in 2005.
A spokesman from Veterans Affairs Canada noted that Canadian sailors "who served in the Murmansk Run performed a valuable and heroic service" during the Second World War.
"Those who perished as a result of their service in the Arctic convoys are commemorated in the Second World War Book of Remembrance or the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance," spokesman Simon Forsyth added.
But he also noted "there is no Canadian medal or badge in recognition of those who specifically served in the Arctic convoys that re-supplied Russia" during the war.
Among the Royal Canadian Navy vessels involved in the Murmansk Run was HMCS Haida, now a museum ship anchored on the Lake Ontario shore at Hamilton, and fellow Canadian destroyers Huron, Iroquois, Athabaskan, Sioux and Algonquin.
Duane Duff, a B.C. historian who chronicled the Murmansk Run voyages of a Canadian warship in his book the Waskesiu: Canada's First Frigate, welcomed the British move to fully honour Allied veterans of the Arctic supply runs.
"If it does come about, I'm all for it," he told Postmedia News.
"These runs were so dangerous and bitterly cold. So much ice would form on the ship that the crew had to make sure they kept it clear, because if it formed on one side it could tip the ship."
(Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act)
Photo:
Undated handout photo of the Royal Canadian Navy destroyer HMCS Haida
Photograph by: Handout, via Postmedia News