| The Canadian 'Falcon of Malta' who died for Israel'Top Guns': The little-known  story of the decorated Canadian WWII pilot who died mysteriously in 1948  after joining the Israeli Air Force.One of the most successful and decorated Canadian  World War II "Top Guns," George Frederic' Buzz' Beurling, was born in  Montreal one hundred years ago on December 6, 1921. After the war, he  joined the nascent Israeli Air Force to fight in the War of Independence  and was killed mysteriously in 1948: It was a lamentable end to a  dazzling dream. This is his story.     'Buzz' was, without a shadow of a doubt, among  the most accomplished fighter pilots in military aviation. He was  considered a "lone wolf" who spent more time mathematically calculating  optimal shots from various angles and distances to maximize Spitfire  ammunition than having a pint with his mates. For example, Beurling  found that by shooting cannon on the approximated flight path of an  enemy plane, one could attack the aircraft without straightening one's  tail, utilizing a side angle. Pilots who flew with Beurling said that he  would notice approaching planes before anyone else and count them. As  others were unable to see what he was talking about, they thought that  he was nervous or tense, but in the end, he was always accurate.      Known as "The Falcon of Malta," he and other 'Top  Guns' played a significant role in preventing Hitler and Mussolini from  occupying the island and turning the western Mediterranean into an Axis  lake, thus securing the vital lines of communication for their North  African campaigns. Accordingly, the dictators blockaded the  strategically located island, intercepted supplies to the besieged  British forces, and bombed the small island incessantly. The Germans and  Italians flew over 3000 bombing raids, dropping 6,700 tons of bombs on  the Grand Harbor area alone: the archipelago was largely reduced to  rubble.  In May 1941, Erwin Rommel warned that "Without Malta, the Axis  will end by losing control of North Africa." In Churchill and Malta's War, 1939-1945, Douglas  Austin argues that the Prime Minister understood that without Malta's  ability to attack ships resupplying German forces in North Africa,  victory in Europe would be delayed by up to a year. Victory on the  shores of the burning island enabled the Allies to use it as an  unsinkable carries in the subsequent invasion of Italy leading to the  collapse of the Berlin-Rome Axis. With  little or no food, shortage of spare parts and fuel, Buzz and his  fellow pilots fought bravely against all odds. They launched sorties  after sorties, with little rest, as waves of enemy warplanes tried to  force Malta into submission. Each Nazi assault was confronted and  repulsed with the defiant roar of Spitfires resulting in the decimation  of the Luftwaffe and the Regia Aeronautica Italiana. Those who fought  the Axis were often reminded by Admiral of the Fleet, Andrew Browne  Cunningham of the Great Siege of Malta in 1565 when the Ottoman Empire  was defeated by the Knights Hospitaller who fought valiantly against  Suleiman the Magnificent's superior forces. 'Buzz' shot 27 Axis  warplanes in two weeks in 1942 and earned another sobriquet:"Knight of  the Sky."  Churchill's commendation issued after the Battle of Britain in 1940 "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few" found  new resonance as the Pact of Steel's Maltese dreams were shattered on  the shores of a blood-drenched island thanks mainly to Beurling and his  band of brothers.  After the war, as Israel's War of Independence was  about to start, 'Buzz' deeply felt that Arab threats to destroy the  fledgling Jewish State would amount to granting Hitler a posthumous  victory. Without hesitation, Beurling decided to take to the skies yet  again and help Israel survive. The fledgling Israel Air Force was forged  in battle, but most pilots and aircrew were overseas volunteers. The  reason for this disastrous situation was that Britain, in charge of the  Palestine Mandate before May 15, 1948, had refused to accept Palestinian  Jews who wanted serve in the RAF until 1943 - almost four years into  the war. When the 1948 War broke out, there were only 25 Jewish pilots:  the rest came from abroad, including my boss at Israel Aerospace  Industries, the late Al Shwimmer, an American, who organized the  smuggling of jets into Israel. 'Buzz's' decision to join the fray did not come as a surprise to George's brother Rick who told Itay Itamar, writing for the Israel Air Force Journal that the family had been brought up on Holy Scriptures and that both he and 'Buzz' shared a Judeo-Christian world view.  "We very much identified with the history of the  people of Israel. Our father always said that one day Israel would  become an independent state, and we always waited for it to happen,"  remembered Rick. "I think that after George's experience in World War  II, together with the fact that Israel was about to become a nation, he  ran to help. Even though he wasn't Jewish, he had a Jewish heart "said  Rick Beurling. 'Buzz' contacted Sydney Solomon, a Montreal Jewish  community leader who was deeply involved in Jewish and Israeli affairs.  It was not easy: Solomon was suspicious and questioned Buerling's  motives. "Sydney sat with us in the kitchen and told us that it was  challenging for them to believe my brother because he thought that it  was a trick or a type of bait," recalled Rick during Itamar's interview.  But, 'Buzz' convinced him as he answered each question with a quote  from the Bible. He wanted to be part of the epic struggle about to  unfold and burned with the desire to defend the Jewish State. Beurling, a  religious man versed in the Holy Books, could not imagine that a few  years after the liberation of concentration camps, another holocaust  might be inflicted on the Jewish people.   According to Itamar, as soon as Beurling received  the green light at the outbreak of the War of Independence, he joined  Leonard Yehuda Cohen, a British ace who had also fought in Malta. Both  pilots volunteered in the nascent Israeli air force. 'Buzz's' first  operation was to bring a Norseman plane from Italy to Israel on May 20,  1948. But, the aircraft exploded and crashed in mysterious circumstances  in Rome as many believe that the plane was sabotaged before it took  off. He was twenty-seven years old when he died. His charred remains were unclaimed and kept in a  warehouse in the Verano Monumental Cemetery for five months. Eventually,  Beurling, the romantic war hero, was interred in Rome's Protestant  Memorial Garden, appropriately enough, between the graves of Percy  Bysshe Shelly and John Keats.   Although we don't have access to all the relevant  documents, the suspicious circumstances concerning the crash have been  discussed in many books, including Brian Nolan's The Buzz Beurling Story.  Suffice to note that the World War II ace had many powerful foes: Pro-  Arab western secret services were fiercely opposed to his activities;  Rome was full of Nazis signing up to fight with the Arabs; remnants of  the SS were sworn to settle scores with the "Maltese Falcon"; and Arab  intelligence services were determined to prevent incipient Israel from  attaining air superiority, especially as Beurling was about to fly the  P-51 Mustang. But the possibility of an accident, however, cannot be  discounted. At  the suggestion of the State of Israel and with the approval of the  Beurling family, on November 9, 1950, George's remains were brought from  Italy to Israel. He was laid to eternal rest with full military honors  in the Christian cemetery in Haifa. On the 60th Anniversary of his internment, it was  decided, based on the family's request, to grant George a full Jewish  commemorative service in Haifa. The memorial service was attended by the  crew of the "Flying Camel" squadron, the commander of the squadron, and  the head of the Department of Fallen Soldiers, Lt. Col. Danny  Shneidman, who accompanied the Beurling family during their first visit  to Israel. The Canadian Ambassador to Israel, Jon Allen, and the  Canadian Defense Attaché to Israel Col. Geordie Elms, too, were present.   | 
No comments:
Post a Comment