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Friday, March 13, 2015

Can Warriors be Good Men ?

The question was asked quietly in one of the bars yesterday, after we had been talking about actors.  The discussion was about really Good men. Holy men.  And a film actor.  But as I was down in the crypt washing my sins off the falgstones, upstairs the conversation broadened the range of 'jobs'.

A young woman sneaked past the bar-staff and down into the cellars and quietly asked me if I would please consider a 'case' study she had conducted.  I did. It was of a man of whom I already knew much but who had slipped from my mind many years past.

Let me digress just a little and mention the awful experiences that Warriors go through. In the USA there is outrage at the way their 'Vets' are treated. Their already woeful health system, a disgrace for most citizens and made even more of a minefield by President Obama's 'Obamacare' (an oxymoronic word), is almost tolerable compared to the tardy and neglectful Veterans Administration system. Brave men are often left to fend for themselves despite having served their country and done their 'best'. Can such men as lead and Command those soldiers ever show themselves to be 'Good and Holy' men if they so egregiously abandon their men?

It is not a problem confined to America. In the UK there are homeless ex-soldiers in despair. Abandoned. In Oz too. A recent effort in Oz has seen the establishment of a fund to house a large number of ex-servicemen (as we call them).

Another thing Americans often fail to acknowledge is the role of Aristocracy. They eschew it, make fun of it and generally deride the idea of Lords and Ladies. Mind you they do like to name their children 'Lorde' or Duke, or the ubiquitous 'Earl'.

So, this rather pleasant young woman,  Siobhan Reeves, who interrupted my tasks brought one such to my attention. A Lord from the second world war.  A Warrior. A thoroughly Holy man. I invited her to go back upstairs and tell the guys in the bar about Leonard Cheshire.


Almost exactly 23 years ago, in her 1992 Christmas Message, Queen Elizabeth II paid special tribute to Leonard Cheshire, who had passed away six months before: 
“Perhaps this shining example of what a human being can achieve in a lifetime of dedication can inspire in the rest of us a belief in our own capacity to help others.” 
Cheshire was an extraordinary individual whose legacy should not be forgotten.
Group Captain Lord Leonard Cheshire of Woodhall, 
VC OM DSO DFC (1917-1992), 
....was the youngest group captain in the RAF in 1944 at the age of 26. 

For the Americans here, a Group Captain is an RAF Rank equivalent to full Colonel. 
By the end of the war he had so much combat experience that statisticians estimate he should have been killed four times over. 
He completed over 100 missions, and in 1944 took command of the legendary 617 Squadron, the Dam Busters.

He received the Victoria Cross in 1944. 
Field Marshal Sir William Slim (who served as Australian governor-general from 1953 to 1960) considered Cheshire’s VC to be the finest awarded during World War II, as it was earned for remarkable courage over a great number of missions rather than for one battle.
Cheshire was also the official British observer for the dropping of the nuclear bomb on Nagasaki on August 15, 1945. As well as the VC, Cheshire received three Distinguished Service Orders (DSO) and the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC), making him the most highly decorated British airman of World War II, at just 28 years of age.
So, we have a Warrior. Proven in Battle. Effective. A Leader who inspired. 

And he was to become a Lord. A member of the Aristocracy that we have largely done away with, what with them being snooty and posh and looking down their noses on 'ordinary' people, (according to our new non-judgemental, tolerant society).  

He could have dined out on his exploits for the rest of his life. Feted and applauded. But.... 

In 1948 Cheshire took into his home a terminally ill man, Arthur Dykes. Dykes was a Catholic and his faith had a deep impact upon Cheshire. After Dykes’s death, Cheshire converted to Catholicism and was baptised on Christmas Eve, 1948.
By the following year, Cheshire was caring for 28 patients in his home, and thus started the Cheshire homes for the ill and disabled. 
HRH the Duke of Edinburgh described these homes as 
“one of the greatest acts of humanity of our time”. 
Humanity AND Humility. 
Cheshire himself took care of the patients and the upkeep of the home, from scrubbing floors to cleaning bedsores. 
For his works he was invested with the Order of Merit by HM the Queen in 1981, and eventually accepted a peerage in 1991.
You see, Aristocratic rank is not always just a matter of 'inheriting' or being born with a silver spoon in a mouth. It is not even about money.  

It is 'award'; reward; acknowledgement; recognition. 


It is Honour.
Cheshire’s remarkable wife was also a great humanitarian in her own right. 
Baroness Ryder of Warsaw CMG OBE (1924-2000), at the outset of World War II, joined the first aid nursing yeomanry at the age of 15. She later became part of the Polish section of the Special Operations Executive (SOE).
Witnessing first-hand the sufferings of refugees and wounded soldiers, Ryder after the war set about establishing homes for these people. Immediately after the war she also worked tirelessly for the former inmates of concentration camps, many of whom were then tragically in prison. 
She herself was also a convert to Catholicism. 
Cheshire and Sue Ryder met in 1954, and were married in India in 1959, spending their honeymoon establishing a home for sufferers of leprosy. 
Cheshire and Ryder continued with their respective charities and also created a new charity, the Ryder-Cheshire Foundation. In the three charities, there are now nearly 400 homes in more than 50 countries.
I had the privilege of reading some of Cheshire’s private letters, and was touched by his warmth, generosity and tireless work ethic. Both Cheshire and Ryder were extraordinary individuals who, after seeing first-hand the trauma of war and “man’s inhumanity to man”, dedicated their lives to relieving the suffering of those neglected by society.  
When Cheshire died in July 1992, having been diagnosed with motor neurone disease in January of that year, and when Ryder died in November 2000, the world mourned the passing of .... 
two true servants of humanity. 
Characteristically, Cheshire commented upon his own grim diagnosis, “Now I am one of them (the disabled) too. At last I can fully begin to understand their problems, and know exactly what still needs to be done.”  
Here in Australia, the Ryder-Cheshire Foundation runs three homes: in Mount Gambier (SA) and Singleton (NSW) for the care of people with physical and intellectual disabilities, and in Ivanhoe (Melbourne) to provide accommodation for patients from rural areas or interstate who are receiving outpatient treatment at Melbourne hospitals. Overseas the Australian Foundation supports the Ryder-Cheshire homes Raphael, at Dehra Dun in northern India, and Klibur Domin, at Tibar in East Timor.
The president of Ryder-Cheshire Australia, Air Commodore Peter Newton, AO RAAF (Retd), is one of many Australians who have been inspired by Cheshire’s remarkable life and who continue his work today. He says: “From the most highly decorated British airman of World War II to one of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century, Leonard Cheshire was indeed a remarkable individual. He and his wife Sue Ryder have inspired generations of people who continue to help those who are sick and disabled in nearly 400 homes in 50 different countries. His legacy is ongoing.”
I was more than pleased to pull a pint of fine Ale for a fine gal who told the timely tale. 

The conversations in the Tavern will no doubt pass on from Holiness and how we, as individuals might achieve it. I am still not at all sure that it is not thrust upon us. Well, onto the shoulders of some people.  But for today it is something we perhaps need to pause and consider.

Read again the selflessness of Len Cheshire. And of his wife. These were to GOOD people. I look at my own past actions and achievements, and, yes, even some of the good works that I have done. Mine  are piddling in comparison. 

Their Humility shows me how much more I have to go down on my old, knarled knees.

An end note. Soibhan slipped in almost without being noticed and counted. But coming back up the stone steps into the bar for her tale, a small present was being prepared. 

She is our 100,000th customer.
Siobhan Reeves is studying for a masters degree in international relations at the University of Melbourne. In 2013 she will be assisting at Klibur Domin, the home established in East Timor by the Ryder-Cheshire Foundation in 2000.
http://newsweekly.com.au/article.php?id=5423 
A Warrior MUST have Humlity. 

He MUST hone his warfare skills and be rightfully proud but.... he must purge himself of hubris and be PURE.

Few of us ever achieve that.

Cheshire, VC, scrubbed floors

His Peerage is a sort of earthly equivalent of Sainthood. I am as sure of his place in the Communion of Saints as I expected for the other chap the other day.
Pax









3 comments:

  1. Following on from your previous post this another heartwarming story of two inspirational people.

    I had heard of the Cheshire Homes but had no inkling of the story of the man behind them. I thank the Taverner and and his lady customer for sharing the story of this admirable man :-)

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  2. And a pleasure to put it on the table, too.

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  3. Take note of another view too, by JH, a sound customer. At: http://www.nourishingobscurity.com/2015/03/remarkable-men-and-women/

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Ne meias in stragulo aut pueros circummittam.

Our Bouncer is a gentleman of muscle and guile. His patience has limits. He will check you at the door.

The Tavern gets rowdy visitors from time to time. Some are brain dead and some soul dead. They attack customers and the bar staff and piss on the carpets. Those people will not be allowed in anymore. So... Be Nice..