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What my Father didn't do in the war
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Artikel-Nr:
9780745968551
Veröffentl:
2016
Seiten:
240
Autor:
Gethin Russell-Jones
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

While Gethin''s mother spent most of the Second World War cracking German codes at Bletchley Park, his father was a conscientious objector. As he grew up, and his mother maintained her Government-imposed silence on what she had been doing, Gethin''s father was voluble on his pacifism, and Gethin dreaded the question ''What did your father do in the War?'' The answer ''Nothing'' seemed shameful. Now, with his mother''s story out in print, he sets off to find out why his father took the stance he did, the roots of the tradition of conscientious objection in the Welsh valleys, and how the family felt about the decision and the shame it brought.
What did you do in the war, daddy?' It's a classic question - and maybe one that expected the answer to be stories of brave attacks on enemy lines, pressing forward against overwhelming odds. But to Gethin Russell-Jones, the question was not one to ask - he knew what his father had done and, growing up, would have summed his father's contribution to the war effort under one word: 'Nothing.' As a conscientious objector, and despite the fact that his fiancée was cracking German codes at Bletchley during the Second World War, John Russell-Jones exhibited a different kind of courage to that shown by most of his peers. Convinced that Christ's teaching forbade him to take the life of another, he faced ignominy, insults, and opposition, from the state, his friends, and even his own family. As an adult, Gethin decided it was time to look for the man his father had been, and to see if he could regain respect for him. And as he finds out what led his father to the decision he made, he discovers a man he never really knew - one who was prepared to suffer for an unpopular and unfashionable belief, and who exhibited a different kind of courage in doing so.

Contents
Family Tree 8
Chapter 1: War Child 9
Chapter 2: Conchie 12
Chapter 3: A Good Year for Diaries 25
Chapter 4: Strong Mothers 34
Chapter 5: Hovel Fit for a King 44
Chapter 6: I Was in School with Him 57
Chapter 7: John the Baptist 71
Chapter 8: 1936 and the Rise of Nationalism 85
Chapter 9: 1938, a Year of Preparation 97
Chapter 10: Sunday 1 September 1939 110
Chapter 11: 1939, Cardiff 9050 117
Chapter 12: 1940, Air Raid Warden 129
Chapter 13: An Appointment in London 143
Chapter 14: Let Me Now Be God’s Soldier 159
Chapter 15: 1943, a Badly Chewed Suit 171
Chapter 16: 1944, a Love Letter to Piety 186
Chapter 17: Today I Had a Long Discussion with a Young Lady About
Pacifism and Christianity 196
Chapter 18: 1944, a Deep-Rooted Problem 205
Chapter 19: Not Fit for Human Occupation 212
Chapter 20: A Strange Courage 223
Notes 233

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