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Hello all,
Just a quick note to let you know we are all very buisy planning for Bussum Bridgehead 2004. This will take place on May 7, 8 and 9, Bussum, The Netherlands. Over 300 re-enactors with up to a hundred vehicles, recreating the atmosphere of liberated Holland in 1945. Trust me, this is a very good alternative for those of you wanting to join in a great event, but not want to end up wandering around a Normandy village, after paying a lot of money, and go home with a very unsatisfied feeling.... ![]() I will be back shortly to get youy the address of our (English version) website for all the details. Martin. |
#2
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I finally got the info for our website complete.
Please visit: http://www.bussumbridgehead.com Hope to see some of you in Holland this May, good oportunity to test the vehicles for Normandy.... ![]() Cheers, Martin. |
#3
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I must thinking about the (term) "Windmill" but ..... that's an other story !!! Mvg. Dirk ![]() |
#4
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Very nice of you to take the trouble of posting the flyer here!
I am not sure though what you mean about the "Windmill" bit.... Will you be joining us in the parade on Saturday? At our last meeting it was announced that the amount of armour this year will be very impressive, with not only the 2 M24´s we´ve had before, but a pair of Shermans too ![]() Hanno, any idea if you may be comming as well this year? Cheers, Martin. |
#5
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Is this the application of the word "WINDMILL" that you were thinking about.. Our lickspittle political leader will turn in the wind at the slightest breeze... A election is coming in Canada and this guttless wonder will be gone ,hopefully... CVE Day Commemoration - Veterans group calls PM's decision to cancel Netherlands trip an insult OTTAWA, April 25 /CNW Telbec/ - Cliff Chadderton, Chairman of the National Council of Veteran Associations, issued this statement today following an announcement by Prime Minister Paul Martin that he has decided to cancel his trip to The Netherlands: So the year 2005 has been declared the Year of the Veteran by the Canadian Government! For veterans it will go down in history as the year in which our Prime Minister delivered to them the worst of all insults. Believe it or not, he has refused to join with Canadians in Holland who will be celebrating the Liberation Day with those wonderful Dutch people who withstood the brunt of the cruel Nazi SS. In the act of sending the German hordes to their homes, what did the veterans do? 10,000 of our very best lost their lives in our aircraft. Many young citizen soldiers threw down their civilian implements to take up a rifle and beat the Germans in the kind of war only they could understand. The Year of the Veteran is meant to pay homage to other groups of Canadians. Take for example the Merchant Navy. We lost more Seamen per capita than any other country in the world. What does the Year of the Veteran mean to the young Canadian with the bayonet or the grenade who went into hand to hand combat and knocked the blazes out of what was supposed to be the finest army in the world - - that is, Hitler's well hardened troops? The fact that our Prime Minister has decided not, according to press reports, to join with those of us who went into the battle ill-prepared and with rudimentary weapons to put the rampaging Germans back in their place, is an insult. Who will feel the insult more? Firstly those who lie in far off foreign fields. Then there are those who came home maimed but still with fighting spirit. How about the widows? They probably suffered the worst loss when their husbands were killed, and the loss is now borne by the children and grandchildren of that generation who fought in World War II. Picture this: a Dutch family throws open its home and invites a Canadian veteran and his bride or children to dinner. How would the Canadian explain that Liberation Day may be important to the Dutch but apparently is not of significant importance in the eyes of our Prime Minister? He could easily have joined with his troops and their survivors to participate with The Netherlands in celebrating the 60th anniversary of May 8th. The Dutch call it Liberation Day for good reason. How many Dutch would understand if a Canadian tried to say that our Prime Minister felt it more important to stay home and defend the record of a sleazy Government which spent $250 million under circumstances which may be close to indicating criminal intent? No! The Dutch will not understand. They will say, "Politics are politics. We have them in Holland, you have them in Canada, but there was only one Hitler and only one World War II." We lost 39,000 young Canadians in defeating Hitler. The Dutch will never forget that. How will they explain to their own children, who go to the Canadian gravesites at Christmas with candles and who have adopted as their own, the Canadian soldiers who lost their lives fighting for the freedom of the Dutch? I am speaking as Chairman of the National Council of Veteran Associations. It represents some 51 veterans groups - some of them small, like the RCAF; but all of tremendous importance, like the Nursing Sister Association of Canada. Words fail me in describing the extent of this insult. The next time I visit Holland it will be necessary to say that our Prime Minister attempted to ride out the storm at home on the unsurpassed record earned in foreign battlegrounds. What a shame that The Year of the Veteran - 2005 - should be celebrated by what can only be called a mockery engineered by our own Prime Minister or those who gave him the advice to stay home. For further information: Communications at 1-877-60MEDIA or e-mail communications@waramps.ca
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
#6
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Mvg. Dirk |
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