tonypaj
Practically Family
- Messages
- 659
- Location
- Divonne les Bains, France
Spitfire said:A lot of danes (civil as well as armypersonnel) had signed up to help Finland against the Soviet aggression and the Winter War. But never came to fight there, because it ended before they got into the fight.
They did it - and even he thought about it - because the Soviet Union was "the common enemy" back then.
And even the Nazis helped Finland.
Being Finnish, and my mother being a refugee from Karelia (she left her home with a suitcase in her hand, and never returned), my grandfather having fought two wars against the Reds, first the Finnish ones, then the Russian ones, I have to dispute a bit your story.
Finns fought the Winter War pretty much on their own, no real help was forthcoming from anywhere, be it Danes, Nazis, Swedes, anyone. We fought the war for our independence, that was precious, young, and not tradable. We would have fought the same if the aggressors had been the previous colonial power, Sweden, or anyone else. It was a fight against the oppressor who happened to be communist and a colonial power that had ruled over us for more than a 100 years. We paid dearly, but for comparison just see what happened to Estonians, e.g., who chose a different route facing the same enemy.
I asked my father the last time I saw him before he died about the war and my grandfather, whether they were Nazis, or Nazi sympathizers (have no idea why, the conversation just went there). He was a young man of 17 when the war ended and he categorically stated that "not a chance, it was not about that".
To answer the original question, my family was clearly on the wrong side. That side was simply our own, and we were on our own. We lost our land, our farm, but got back up again. To add, I've lived away from Finland for the last 20-25 years, I want no part of it, really, my home is today in France. That changes nothing about my feelings for the sacrifice my people made then.