FANFARE July 2016 | Page 29

‘‘ Maurice was shot while joyriding in a cart like this Cutting down trees was expressly forbidden. “People took up skirting boards, floorboards and the honour boards in the schools. I know for a fact that my father cut down trees. But get caught, and you were gone, they just completely wanted to dominate the local population.” The big problem was a lack of fuel to cook with. “There was a community oven you could use once a week to cook your food. There was a lot of help amongst the community, if you had a surplus of something you would give it to someone else.” But even smallest acts of resistance were dealt with harshly, and resulted in the deportation of around 570 islanders to concentration camps. “It was the ultimate punishment for anything that you’d done, certainly hiding things like tobacco, and food.” The Gestapo presence, particularly in the capital St Helier, meant that people had to be especially enterprising. “There was certainly no coffee – we made that out of acorns, so you would grind up acorns, and then roast them. “My father used to grow his own tobacco. He smoked in those days, though he gave up after the war,” says Maurice chuckling at the irony of this contradiction. People in Jersey walked on a knife edge between collaboration and co-operation, and some people did become surprisingly rich. “My father always told a story about people driving to the bank with a truck full of Deutschmarks they were going It was very dangerous listening to the BBC to convert,” recalls Maurice. “They were supplying the Germans with materials and spying on the local population as well. My mother always said that when the war ended, she’d know the people who had been trading with the Germans because they were the ones with all the money, and over a period of five years, there was quite a lot of money to be made.” And collaboration went beyond trading material for Deutschmarks. More than 900 babies are known to have been fathered by German soldiers stationed in Jersey. And many children grew up as islanders not knowing their father had been a German officer. Island girls who fraternised with the occupiers were mocked as “jerrybags”. This personal collaboration caused a lot of resentment, and after the war, resulted in many acts of revenge on the island. “Some of these girls were thrown on to barbed wire fences,” said Maurice. But after a while, resentments faded, and people decided to put the war behind them. Jersey Islanders realised they couldn’t go on living as they had under the occupation. “At some point, they decided to put it all behind them, and move on, to do things differently and to forget the war. There was no use in harking back to the war and looking for revenge.” Even after the troops had left, the German occupation left a mark on those who lived through it. ‘My mother became a great stocker of everything, everything Many women who collaborated with German soldiers had babies. They were subject to retribution at the end of the war-like this French woman with her baby having her head shaved and paraded through the streets that was needed for the family. After that, she was a hoarder all her life,” says Maurice. “She’d learned that if you didn’t have a store of products to support your family you were going to starve, so everything was put away and kept.” The liberation of Jersey in 1945 by the Americans bought the island freedom and an end to the struggles of war. And for Maurice it also brought other unimagined delights. “I’d never seen a banana, and I’d never seen an orange before. I thought it was something to do with football, So, I just started kicking it,” he recalls smiling. And when asked to sum up the war as a whole he said: “It was a hell of an adventure.” n Liberation: German soldiers leaving the Channel Island for the last time but as prisoners of war 27