Alphen, Netherlands. 27
April. Hongerwinter. It was perhaps the first true humanitarian military intervention. On the morning of
29 April, 1945 a Lancaster bomber called Bad
Penny took off from its base in eastern England on a test mission to drop food to the Dutch people that would eventually see 11,000 tons dropped from the skies in a little over a week. It is hard to believe sitting here in
prosperous, modern, comfortable Netherlands that seventy years ago today some
twenty-one million people were facing starvation with thousands dead or dying. Indeed,
between 18,000 and 22,000 Dutch civilians had already died during the infamous
1944-45 “hongerwinter” (hungry winter). The threat facing the Dutch people prompted
perhaps the most remarkable ‘bombing’ campaigns by the Royal Air Force and
United States Army Air Force of World War Two - Operation Manna (RAF/RCAF) and Operation
Chowhound (USAAF).
By early April 1945
Field Marshal Montgomery’s 21st Army Group had isolated German
forces under General Johannes Blaskowitz in the western Netherlands,
effectively cutting them off. On 9 April,
Churchill and the British war cabinet discussed the need for urgent action to
alleviate the suffering of the Dutch population.
Montgomery allocated
two divisions, mainly from the Canadian First Army (General Crerar) to feeding
the Dutch people, even though much of the territory remained under German
occupation. Churchill proposed
approaching the head of the German occupation, the notorious Reich Commissar
Arthur Seyss-Inquart, to seek a ceasefire.
However, he added a the warning that, “…if they refuse [to co-operate],
we shall hold all German troops left in Holland responsible for it”.
Seyss-Inquart initially
refused any threatened to blow the Dutch dykes and flood much of the country
between Allied and German forces.
However, hedging his bets Seyss-Inquart also suggested that a ceasefire
may be possible if the Red Cross brought in the food. It was a face-saving manoeuvre and by the end
of April a deal was agreed. Thereafter, as part of the biblically-named
Operation Manna between the end of April and 7 May the Royal Air Force and
Royal Canadian Air Force flew 3928 sorties over the Netherlands delivering some
6680 tons of food. Operation Chowhound saw
the USAAF fly an additional 2268 sorties dropping some 4000 tons of food. When
that effort proved insufficient a land operation began delivering food often behind
German lines and often with the tacit approval of the Wehrmacht.
One 170 Squadron RAF
Lancaster was tasked with dropping food over the town of Vlaardingen.
Rear-gunner Denis Thomson recalled, “People were waving and shouting. The nurses were lying on the sloping roof of
the hospital, waving and cheering us as we flew over. We were only about 600
feet in the air and supplies were dropped in crates with no parachutes. People ran to gather the food – I was really
worried a crate would land on their heads”.
Bob Upcott of 115
Squadron, Royal Air Force, recalled: “All our bombers were flying at low
altitude so as not to damage the food parcels. On one of our Manna missions we
flew over a hospital on our way back from the drop zone. We saw a nurse there
unfold the largest Union Jack we had ever seen.
It was a remarkable gesture – and a brave one. German soldiers looked on
in bemusement”.
German forces in the
Netherlands surrendered on 5 May, 1945. Amidst
the horror and the suffering there were lighter moments. One of the main architects of the drops and
the eventual peace was the German-born Dutch Prince Bernhard, husband of then
Princess Juliana, who was part of a four man negotiating team. Bernhard was a chain smoker and was forced to
step outside of the meeting each time he craved a cigarette. The moment he appeared Dutch civilians would
start singing the Wilhelmus, the
Dutch national anthem. After hearing the
Wilhelmus countless times Bernhard
vowed to give up smoking.
Operations Manna and
Chowhound marked the beginning of the transition from war to peace at the end
of World War Two. It also marked the
moment when the brave, quiet, resistance of the Dutch people saw them claim
their country back from the Nazis. For
the British, Canadians, Americans and others who took part in Operations Manna
and Chowhound it was one of those wartime events which crystallized the need
for the terrible struggle to drive Nazism from Europe.
The Netherlands would
not be the country it is today but for the stout resistance of the Dutch people
and the courage of the Allied servicemen who liberated the Netherlands.
Lest we forget!
Julian Lindley-French