Sunday 12 July 2015

Acknowledging The Few

I was gobsmacked to read in Friday's paper that a survey conducted for (I think) the RAF Benevolent Fund - though it beats me why they should spend money conducting such a survey - showed that only 1 in 4 young people (however they define 'young') knows anything about the Battle of Britain.  Well, just in case any of those young people happen across this blog, it was the first aerial battle and was fought between the Royal Air Force and the German Luftwaffe between July and September 1940, the first day of the battle being 10th July so Friday was the 75th anniversary.

Hitler was massing his troops on the other side of the Channel ready to launch Operation Sealion, the invasion of Great Britain.  But he needed to gain control of the skies before he could start.  The pilots of the RAF, flying Spitfires and Hurricanes, managed to prevent the Luftwaffe gaining control and Hitler switched his attention to the invasion of Russia.  It seems highly likely that if Operation Sealion had been launched, the whole of Britain would have been occupied and the outcome of World War II might have been very different.

As Prime Minister Winston Churchill declared, "Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few".  Those RAF pilots, many of whom were still in their teens, have ever since been known as The Few.

The Battle of Britain Memorial is sited high on the clifftop between Dover and Folkestone, at the heart of Hellfire Corner, as this part of England was known, right where the battle was fiercest.  It features an airman sitting and watching over the Channel, waiting for the call to "scramble".


2 comments:

Louisetheknittinglamb said...

It is a shame how many people have no idea about history at all... But then I think most teachers don't take that too serious anyway...

When all the newspaper ran lenghty articles about the 50. anniversary of JFKs death and each TV channel was full of documentaries we asked our apprentices if they know who JFK was... None of them had a clue. When Nelson Mandela died and we asked them about him the closest they got was "Some guy in Africa" Um yes...

But I think the best story comes from a friend of mine who was asked by a friend if she could help her understand who was against whom in WWII. So my friend explained for hours and eventually her friend said that she understood now. "So let me sum up; we have the UK, the States and France against Germany. De Gaulle was this French guy and Churchill was President of the US." My friend said she never felt so hard that she had just wasted two hours of her life...

I do know about the Battle of Britain - as well as Dunkirk, D-Day and all that and I'm under 30ie and not even from the UK....

Brighton Pensioner said...

Thank you, Louise. It is so frustrating to a wrinklie like me that so many people, young people especially, have no idea where we are coming from.