Born a German, he was a true Nederlander!
From The Mad Monarchist (18 June 2010)
HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands had a rather controversial life
from the very start of his marriage to the future Queen Juliana of the
Netherlands due to his German nationality. However, despite being born a
Prince of Lippe-Biesterfeld, and having been a member of the Nazi Party
as a matter of convenience, upon his marriage he became Dutch all the
way and absolutely loyal to the Netherlands and the Royal House of
Orange. At no time was this more thoroughly proven than during his
service in World War II against the country he was born in.
Prince
Bernhard played an active role in the war from the very start when the
Germans bombed and invaded the Netherlands. He grabbed a machine gun,
made a battle group out of the Dutch royal guards and led them in
shooting at German airplanes. When the Dutch government and
(reluctantly) the Queen went into exile in Great Britain Prince Bernhard
initially refused to go, wishing to stay in Holland and fight on,
however, he finally submitted to go to England and take charge of the
Dutch military mission in London. He wanted to work with British
Intelligence and the Navy and Allied high command. Some had misgivings
about him because of his German background, but he was thoroughly
investigated and King George VI of Great Britain recommended him and he
was finally accepted into the inner circle.
The people back home
in the Netherlands, however, had no such misgivings. Despite the
controversy over his German nationality when he first married into the
Dutch Royal Family, the Prince had proven whose side he was on and
proven his loyalty to his new country and new people. On the first
birthday of Prince Bernhard after the occupation, in a subtle act of
defiance against the Nazi occupiers, Dutch people from all walks of life
placed white carnations (the Prince’s favorite flower) at national
monuments around the country in a show, not just of birthday wishes for
the Prince, but a sign of loyalty to the House of Orange
The
prince also expanded himself by training as a pilot in a British
Spitfire with the Dutch squadron of the RAF and in 1941 was promoted to
wing commander. He also flew bombing and reconnaissance missions over
the Atlantic, France, Germany, Italy and so on for which he was
decorated with the Dutch Flying Cross. Ultimately Queen Wilhelmina of
the Netherlands promoted him to the rank of general and in 1944 was
given command of the Dutch military forces. When the government-in-exile
ordered a rail strike to stop supplies to the German army the Nazis
retaliated by cutting off all food and fuel to the Netherlands. People
were reduced to eating tulip bulbs and stripping abandoned houses for
wood.
The original Allied invasion of the Netherlands (Operation
Market Garden) failed (partly due to the dismissal of Dutch reports on
the ground) with the crushing defeat at Arnhem followed by the movement
of the main Allied effort to the southern front. Prince Bernhard was
greatly concerned with the privations that prevailed in the Netherlands
and he tried to persuade the Allies (principally the British) to
organize a separate offensive north to liberate that part of Holland
still under Nazi rule. Unfortunately, the outbreak of the Ardennes
offensive in Belgium put a halt to all such ideas. Nonetheless, by 1944
Prince Bernhard had become the top commander of the Netherlands armed
forces and returned with his family once the country had been liberated
by the Allies. He was on hand for the negotiations and the formal
surrender of the Nazi forces in 1945. When the Germans tried talking to
Prince Bernhard he refused to speak in his native tongue, having become
Dutch through and through.
After the war he was made Inspector
General and did a great deal to encourage business and the rebuilding of
the Dutch economy as well as taking on a leading role in the aircraft
industry. In the years that followed he had his share of problems and
controversies but was always honored for his service during the dark
days of World War II. He lived to see his daughter Beatrix become Queen
of the Netherlands and died in Utrecht at the age of 93 from cancer in
2004.
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