Posted on 01/26/2012 6:50:22 PM PST by the scotsman
'The young airman was desperate to be back with his family and friends at the end of the war. He had done his bit to see off Hitler and make the world a safer place. His one wish now was to be home with my people. But, instead of a heros welcome, what Irishman Martin Walsh feared was being arrested and locked up.
Sir, he wrote plaintively from England to the authorities in Dublin in 1946, I wish to return as a free Irish citizen once more, without detention or punishment. I would like to have my freedom in Eire and not be caged up like a bird when I go home.
He sought a written pass to protect me from the military and the police. His crime? Leaving Ireland and crossing the water to join the British forces in the struggle against Nazi Germany. It left him in a cruel limbo that, 65 years later, is still scandalously unresolved.
As many as 5,000 troops lived in fear after the War because they deserted to help the British despite Ireland's neutrality.'
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
My great uncle was killed at the Somme in France in 1917.
He joined the British Army in Dublin as did thousands of his fellow Irishmen to fight against the Germans.
Sadly if he would have survived WWI he would have undergone massive hate against him by the Irish when he returned from the war.
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