PrimeTime Magazine Fall 2019 | Page 7

Portsmouth, England, the landing at Juno Beach and the eleven-month long trek that ended in Germany in May 1945. “Everywhere you see those big X’s there was a major battle,” he says, pointing to Courseulles, Bény-Sur- Mer, Caen, Falaise. “Falaise Gap, that was a bad one where our troops got bombed by our own aircraft. We lost almost a whole battery there — killed and wounded — all on the 14th of August. It took us over two months to get there and that was a turning point.” Then the 12th Field Regiment, alongside other Canadian Russell Kaye placed a rose on the grave of Capt. J. regiments, moved on through D. Dobbs in the Brettville-Sur-Laise Canadian War France and Belgium and into Cemetery. Although he died on D-Day, Dobbs is Holland where they spent the buried with his men from the 12th Field Regiment winter near Utrecht. He recalls who died on August 14, 1944 at the Battle of the Falaise Pocket. heavy fighting, as well as flooding PHOTO: Submitted by son Chris Kaye after the Germans breached the dykes. In spring they moved into Eleanor Dixon, before re-joining the Germany, encountering Russian army for 25 years, serving in Korea troops at Aurich at war’s end. and as a peacekeeper. Kaye was discharged in Fredericton He and Eleanor, who passed on in 1946, where he met and married January 14, 2017, were blessed with five children. The oldest, Jimmy was killed in a truck accident in British Columbia. Living in the local area are daughters, Linda Bonnie and Susan, and son, Chris who served in the military for 30 years as Regimental Sergeant Major, with two tours of duty in Afghanistan and one in Bulgaria. “I worried about him and that was when I realized how much my mother worried,” Kaye says, noting that his two older brothers, Aura and Arnold, also served, with Arnold wounded in Italy. “I’m glad I went back,” he says of his recent trip to France, sponsored by the Wounded Warriors Group. He visited war cemeteries and attended 75th anniversary Russell Kaye returned to Juno Beach, Normandy, ceremonies at Juno Beach as the France on June 6, 2019, for the first time since he only still-living member of the 12th went ashore there 75 years ago as a gunner with the 12th Field Artillery as part of the D-Day invasion. Field Artillery. He’s reflective when asked what he would say to young people. “Don’t start wars. War is stupid when you think about it. It’s a stupid thing that to solve a problem you have to kill people. I don’t know if they’ve learned anything or not. “When I went to that cemetery in Dieppe … there are over 1000 buried there … I stood looking at those graves and I said to myself, all those kids, 19, 20, 21 years old … there were thousands of them. What a waste! Here’s all those families that never were. I said I’m a lucky dog. I got to have a family and they didn’t and that is so stupid. But it happened. We did what we had to do and there was no other answer at the time.” ...le français suit à la page 8 PHOTO: Submitted by son Chris Kaye FALL/AUTOMNE 2019 PrimeTime 7