My only emotional link to Edith Cavell and Belgium is through my mother, back in the late 1950s.
My mother was born in Hungary and lived mostly on Windsor Ontario's public relief all during Canada's Dirty Thirties.
But she was an anglophile of a sort (read all of the Hornblower series at age ten !) and somewhere she had picked up that the starving-est people in the world - in the minds of middle aged Anglo Canada of the 1950s at least - were the Belgians.
"Finish all the food on your plate", she would constantly scold us , "Think of the starving Belgians."
So we did think of them - as best as our six year old minds could - and licked our plates clean.
To this day (my mother now dead) , I still think that not finishing your plate is akin to, but worse than , a war crime ...
My forthcoming biography "The OTHER Manhattan Project" celebrates the 75 years since Dr Dawson birthed Antibiotics in Manhattan on October 16th 1940. This project was more from Venus than Mars, more Emma Lazarus than Gordon Gekko. Defying governments, defying Allied/Axis eugenics, even defying the team's physical disabilities. But in the end, Manhattan beaconed the right of EVERYONE to receive life-saving penicillin out to a world tired, huddled and wretched.
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