Canadian and British airmen engaged in fierce and deadly battles in the
skies over Europe during the Second World War. Those who survived often
had to overcome incredible obstacles to do so -- dodging bullets and
German troops, escaping from burning planes and enduring forced marches
if they became prisoners.
In one story, a tail gunner from Montreal survived despite being
unconscious when blown out of his bomber. Another story describes how
the crew of a navigator from Ottawa used chewing gum to fill holes in
their aircraft. And another tells how a pilot from northern Ontario
parachuted out of his plane and became the target of a German
machine-gunner, but within hours 120 Germans surrendered to him.
These painstakingly researched stories will enable you to feel what
now-aging veterans endured when they were young men in the air war
against Nazi Germany.