news&views Autumn 2020 | Page 42

Visioning Freedom: Then and Now Leo Bruseker In the early evening of May 4, 1945, the residents of Amsterdam were safely settled into their homes, or at least most of them were. This included my father, Theo Bruseker, and his parents and siblings living at 262 Admiraal de Ruyterweg. They were all inside because curfew had begun, and anybody caught outside after curfew was summarily executed, no questions asked. So, when the Bruseker family saw somebody run past their living room window, they were stunned. When another person ran past, they went to investigate. Keeping their feet inside, they peered out into the street to observe a small crowd gathering. They learned that the fighting was over and that the occupation of their country would be soon over. The next day, May 5, the surrender of the Nazi army in the Netherlands was accepted by Canadian General Foulkes. Canadian troops marched through the streets of Amsterdam to the cheers of the Dutch people. The Dutch peoples’ longing for freedom began on May 10, 1940, with the invasion of their country by Nazi Germany, but grew stronger during the fall and winter of 1944 and 1945. Many Dutch had been liberated after two battles, one in the southwest of the country and the other in the southeast, but not the people who lived in the west. Life for them became harder and harder. An unfortunate result of the failure of Operation Market Garden, a battle depicted in the 1977 movie A Bridge Too Far, was that most train and truck transport ceased. This meant that very little coal and food came into the large cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and the Hague. These cities went cold and dark, and the citizens began to starve. Some took to eating tulip bulbs to survive. News about what was happening in the war was difficult to find. Occasionally somebody would tune into the BBC with a forbidden battery-operated radio, type out what they heard, and pass on the information. News was so coveted that these tidbits of news on small pieces of paper were never thrown out. The lack of news is why most Amsterdamers, including the Brusekers, were among the last to find out about the impending end of the war. Every May 4, the Netherlands holds remembrance ceremonies commemorating the end of the war. These are held at the three Canadian cemeteries and on Dam Square in the heart of Amsterdam. My wife, Sandy, and I were to have been in Groesbeek, the largest of these cemeteries holding the remains of 2,300 Canadian soldiers, but 42 | arta.net The relief on the front of the National Monument in Dam Square is entitled De Vrede (Peace) and represents the suffering endured during the war.