
Official Account Of The Battle Of Crete (Wikepedia) followed by my fathers part in it.
The Battle of Crete was a battle during World War II on the Greek island of Crete. The battle began on the morning of 20 May 1941, when Nazi Germany launched an airborne invasion of Crete under the code-name Unternehmen Merkur ("Operation Mercury") Greek and Allied forces along with Cretan civilians defended the island.
After one day of fighting, the Germans had suffered appalling casualties and none of their objectives had been achieved. The next day, through miscommunication and the failure of Allied commanders to grasp the situation, Maleme airfield in western Crete fell to the Germans, enabling them to fly in reinforcements and overwhelm the Allied forces. The battle lasted for about ten days.
The Battle of Crete was unprecedented in three respects: it was the first mainly airborne invasion; it was the first time the Allies made significant use of intelligence from the deciphered German Enigma code; and it was the first time invading German troops encountered mass resistance from a civilian population. In light of the heavy casualties suffered by the parachutists, Adolf Hitler forbade further large scale airborne operations. However, the Allies were impressed by the potential of paratroopers and started to build their own airborne divisions.
My father's account of The Battle Of Crete is as follows...
My father was evacuated from Greece to Chania on Crete where he worked on the tanks. On the day of the invasion he was put on parachute watch. That was quite unusual because he didn’t usually have to do guard duty as he was so useful in the workshops they kept him there rather than put him on guard duties. Afterwards thinking about it my father thought that it was obvious that they knew that there was going to be an airborne assault because the night before the raid, everyone was given arms and guns and they were told to go outside on parachute watch. This didn’t normally happen. A couple of days before the raid, some new Zealand guys had come into the workshops with a Browning machine gun and asked if my father would put it onto tripods with panniers on the sides. My father didn’t know them but he complied with their wishes and off they went. When my father was on duty on the day of the raid, there were an overwhelming number of German parachutes descending upon the Commonwealth troops. My father picked up a Bren gun and at that point he came across the New Zealanders that he had helped with the Browning machine gun in his workshops a few days earlier. They asked him for the gun he had just picked up. He said they could have it but only on the condition that he came along with them. They had seen battle before and my father thought they had a better chance of survival! They said yes and took the gun.
My father remembers several horrible things which happened during that parachute raid. He remembers being in a valley with parachutes falling all around and he remembers the men hanging by their parachutes in the trees, dead. As the parachutes came down and the planes were straffing the troops on the ground my father dove for cover into some trees and there was a New Zealand soldier wedged in a tree and he was dead and had gone black. When he was on his way to Souda Bay he stopped somewhere at a first aid field hospital and there was a man standing there, a Greek man, who was crying a lot. He didn’t speak any English but he gesticulated to my father to go with him and he took him to a lady who was obviously his wife and who had been shot and killed. My father passed the unknown Greek man his rifle and ammunition believing that he would kill more Germans than he would have done himself, particularly as he was on his way to the evacuation point.
On their journey to the evacuation point, they traversed along the mountains via exposed elevated goat paths. They could clearly see the German planes straffing all in their wake in the valley below.
