'It still haunts me': Military veterans keen to share their history as numbers drop - Action News
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'It still haunts me': Military veterans keen to share their history as numbers drop

Military historians worry about keeping veterans' history alive in the minds of Canadians. "It's always a huge loss when we lose our veterans' voices," said Rory Cory, senior curator at The Military Museums in Calgary.

Military historians worry about keeping veterans' history alive

A older man sits and speaks. Over his left shoulder, is a portrait of Second World War bomber aircraft.
Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Hank Jackson, 102, a Halifax bomber tail gunner during World War II, speaks about his experiences. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

The time around Remembrance Day is tough for Second World War veterans like Hank Jackson, who turns 103 in January.

"It's the only time you really stop and think about all the poor buggers that didn't make it," said Jackson, a former tail gunner on a Halifax bomber.

Jackson flew 32 combat missions from the United Kingdom. All members of his crew received Distinguished Flying Crosses from the United States Armed Forces.

"They've all disappeared. My father and my brother were both in the army overseas my father in the First World War and all three of us made it back. So we did above average. We gotta remember a lot of those guys that didn't."

Bill Cook, who is 98 and was also a tail gunner in the Second World War, flew a dozen missions over Europe.

"My crew have all passed away. It still haunts me."

More than one million Canadians served in the Second World War. More than 45,000 died and another 55,000 were wounded. Another 33,000 fought in the Korean War.

A black-and-white photo of a bomber air crew from the Second World War. There are seven men in total.
Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Bill Cook, front row left, is pictured with his Halifax bomber crew members during World War II. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Veterans Affairs Canada says there are 9,267 veterans of the Second World War and Korean War who are still alive in Canada.

But as veterans die, military historians worry about keeping their history alive in the minds of Canadians.

Staff with The Military Museums in Calgary, home to eight separate museums, have interviewed many of the dwindling number of Second World War veterans.

"It's always a huge loss when we lose our veterans' voices," said senior curator Rory Cory.

"That's why it's important for us as a museum and as educators and historians in general to try and keep the public interest alive in those kind of things. It's up to the next generations to carry the torch forward."

Cory said the organization has come up with ways to get more war history into Calgary classrooms. There's a program called Explosive Threats related to mining, demining and peacekeeping. And there's another called Explosive Math, which has students do mathematical calculations to plot the shot fall of an artillery shell.

Two elderly men sit. One is holding a photo of a World War 2 bomber crew, to which both men belonged.
Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Bill Cook, left, holds a World War II photo of his Halifax bomber crew members, as fellow veteran Hank Jackson looks on. Both were Halifax bomber tail gunners during World War II. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Karl Kjarsgaard, curator of the Bomber Command Museum of Canada in Nanton, Alta., said he's disappointed with how little students are learning in school about Canada's contribution to the Second World War.

"Why should children come to our museum and say, 'Canada was in World War II?' I am concerned that Canadians are not being told of the excellence of gentlemen like these guys that did their best to give us our freedom."

Canada's involvement in the Second World War is taught in schools, but it often focuses on international conflicts and root causes as opposed to specific battles and exploits.

In B.C., for example, the provincial education ministry says social studies for Grade 10 covers the history of Canada and the world from 1914 to present day and requires all students learn about "international conflicts and co-operation," with the world wars a suggested topic.

Jackie Jansen van Doorn, executive director of The Military Museums Foundation, said stories from a source are key to educating the younger generation.

"Having someone who's actually been through a war and tell their first-hand experience is something that really makes memories for students that come through our doors," she said.

"The education component this is just huge, and having the loss of these veterans impacts on how the next generation remembers things."

Cook vividly remembered the first time he was in a firefight.

Black and white photo of a bomber crew airman from the Second World War. He is standing outside the plane, between the guns of tail turret.
Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Hank Jackson, a Halifax bomber tail gunner during World War II, is seen in a picture beside his guns during the war. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

"The instructor would say, 'You don't shoot until you see the whites of their eyes.' This Focke-Wulf (German fighter plane) was coming in on the tail and I was sitting there waiting until he got closer, and all of asudden he fired and hit the tail fin," Cook said.

"I was so bloody scared, I didn't know which way to turn. After that, I thought, 'To hell with the hero worship.' When a fighter came in and he was 400 or 500 yards away, I would fire a blast off to let him know, 'I see you,' and they would usually peel off."

Jackson said he doesn't remember a lot of the missions, but he does recall facing his own mortality.

"When we were flying, I honestly did not think we'd make it. Because, you know, I thought if it happened, it's going to happen, and I just hope it happens quick," he said with a laugh.

"I didn't want to go down in a flame or something."

Jackson said he has shared some of his experiences with young people who have come to visit, but he also understands why some aren't aware of what happened in the past. They may not have had family members who served.

"Anyone who has had a family member affected, they probably do."