news&views Autumn 2020 | Page 54

Hero David J. Rhine In honour of Ronald Lewis Rhine, Royal Canadian Navy, MTB 748, 1925–2020 I took my dad to the Remembrance Day ceremonies for the last time in November 2019 and was reminded that he is a hero, as is every man and woman who has served our country. I never regarded my dad as a hero until we visited Holland in 2005 as part of an invited Canadian delegation to celebrate the liberation that took place sixty years before. Canadians were central to this liberation and now have a special relationship with the Dutch. The Canadian vets were greeted with cheers, handshakes, applause, tears, and hugs from the Dutch, who hold these men up as heroes who freed their country, and I began to see him as a hero as well. Dad went to war at age 17. Like many small-town Canadian boys, he felt drawn to the war by his allegiance to Canada and the need to follow in the footsteps of other young men who had left their community to serve, some never to return. Those who gave their lives are obviously heroes, but those who returned, scarred both physically and mentally, are heroes as well. Dad served as a signalman on a motor torpedo boat on the English Channel doing night raids while chased by German U-boats. He was stationed in the bottom of the boat, receiving and sending intelligence messages with the Allies in the channel. Without training, he also cared for the wounded who were sent below, often with horrific life-ending injuries. One of his nightmarish stories is sewing together a man whose abdomen had been shredded open, bowels spilling forth, Dad tucking parts back in, with terror and certainty that the man would not survive. Decades later at a Navy reunion, this man identified himself to Dad with thanks for saving his life. This interaction did not bring relief or a sense of success to Dad; it instead brought back memories of the sailors he couldn’t help, a sense of failure and terror. I learned that on many occasions, Dad was dropped behind enemy lines for clandestine purposes. Once, on a German beach under darkness, a German sentry passed by so closely that he was within reach; so close in fact that Dad could smell the German’s cigarette smoke and the odour of alcohol. Fortunately, the German was so drunk that he was oblivious to my dad’s near presence, preventing a fight and saving them both. Although I have no details of his many other sorties behind enemy lines, I assume that other interactions did not go so well for the enemy because ultimately Dad came home. I have looked at his massive hands and wondered what they had done that he dared not speak about. His hands held us as children and held my mother; they taught me to hit a baseball and stake my tent. What secrets lay within their grip? Although he came home in 1945 physically intact, he was mentally scarred. As a child I wanted to hear his war stories. He didn’t want to share them, and only now can I better understand what he did and how it affected his life. PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder), once known as shell shock or battle fatigue, is now recognized as an insidious, never relenting, and debilitating result of his war experience. For Dad, PTSD was the price he paid to serve and come home: the night terrors, high anxiety, and temper. When he was healthy and had his personal defence system in place — my mother Kay — his PTSD was less obvious. Later, the PTSD only worsened. My mother 54 | arta.net