Equal to the Challenge by Department of National Defence (Canada) (2001) – BR00034 (2007) – ๐ธ๐ธ๐ธ๐ธโช
Plot or Premise
This book is an anthology of womenโs experiences in Canada during World War II. The anthology is a collection of first-person narratives from 57 women who served in various branches of the armed forces, auxiliaries, and private industry in Canada during World War II. Each of the narratives has a similar chronology and approach โ what the women were doing before the war, how they joined the Armed Forces or supporting occupation, their experiences during the war (both personal and professional), their life-in-brief after the war, and, finally, a chance for them to pass some judgement on โwhat did it all meanโ for them or for women in general.
What I Liked
Although I know the editor, and hence added the book to my reading list for that reason, the stories and subject matter are compelling to me in their own right. I can remember reading a USA Today article back in 2001 about the efforts of some U.S. organizations to capture oral histories of their WWI and II survivors, archiving them at the Library of Congress and elsewhere. Volunteer organizations set up sample questionnaires and encouraged young Americans to interview their grandparents about their experiences in the war, recording them and sending them off to be archived. Distributed processing of oral histories is a great technique that works with limited resources, and I remember getting excited about it, wondering what we were doing for Canadian histories? As it turns out, quite a bit.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has a website that captures a lot of this for Canada and has some great materials available to all online. This book captures the often-missed histories of women during that time. The individual stories are compelling and varied in place of origin, type of occupation, impact, and all the elements that comprise the story of each woman, presented in their own words. It is an amazing collective resource for anyone doing research on the era and would serve as both a stand-alone text as well as a supplement to the experiences of others (mostly men) during the Second World War covered elsewhere. And it includes all the things people would expect, which I wonโt cover in detail, as well as some surprising elements that transcend the ordinary.
First and foremost, the book does a fine job of avoiding over-stating the impact of WWII on the womenโs movementโฆthe tendency in many publications of this sort would be to say โthis era is important, these women are important, and therefore this time was the sole catalyst for changing the world forever for womenโ. However, as many of the stories note, a lot of changes were already underway. This doesnโt discount the impact or added impetus of the time, but also places it in a larger context, where women were no longer only being considered second-class citizens. Many of the women left decent jobs to join the Armed Forces, putting a lie to the often-popular view that the women simply โleft the houseโ for the first time during WWII. Second, the small details from individual stories are particularly riveting, golden nuggets of their experiences:
- the lack of common knowledge about the true horrors of the concentration camps until much later after the war โ while lots of organizations try to argue or advocate that people in other countries knew but sat and did nothing to prevent the atrocities, they make that argument with the wisdom of hindsight, forgetting that while rumours ran wild, very few people believed the true level of catastrophe when they heard those rumoursโฆonly after the reality was truly known and documented could people look back and say โthat particular rumour thereโ was true, and we should have believed it. Without a reference point, lots of people would not โ and maybe could not โ believe that such atrocities were possible. Even today, it is hard for people to accept genocide as a real event even though itโs happened before (Jacqueline Laplante, p.22, Elizabeth Hunt, p.142) yet there was some official recognition of the problems as many Jewish people were told to change their identifications before fighting overseas (Nano Penefeather-McConnell, p.126-127);
- the experience of womenโs rifle training and teams (Jacqueline Laplante, p.28);
- the role played by French priests in some family decisions in Quebec, with many of the priests trying hard to prevent the women from joining up or calling them home claiming their birth certificates were forged (Mary Saunders, p.28, et al);
- the commonplace / matter-of-fact way of dealing with notifications of deaths in the family (Ruth Ralston, p.72);
- the drafting of women in England (Elizabeth Hunt, p.134);
- the impact on the economy in Quebec in 1939 with many farming families suddenly having boosts in their family income with many sons and daughters working in factories, and for families in general with work plentiful and banks willing to give loans again (Olive Villeneuve, p.166); and,
- the two government employees explaining to them in 1941 that there were going to be new deductions from their wages for something called โincome taxโ and โunemployment insuranceโ (Olive Villeneuve, p.168).
My favourite story is the impact of reading Lorna Stanger (p.161) talking about VE-Day in Europe. For the first time since the war started, they could have the lights in the city on at night and had it all lit up. For the youngest children, many had only known black-outs and air-raid sirens, and seeing the lights at night actually scared them.
What I Didn’t Like
My biggest complaint is self-inflicted โ I did not follow the advice of the Chief Archivist for DND who recommends in the introduction that people should read a few stories at a time. My challenge was simply that I borrowed the book from the library, so with limited time, I plowed through them. And hence probably had a lessened impact than if they were read properly.
As a result, I found myself in some places confusing stories with the previous one, thinking โhow did she do that? Wasnโt she in Europe by then?โ and then paging back to realize it was a different woman with a similar occupation. In others though, I find myself struggling with the format โ the stories appear one after another, seemingly ungrouped in any way. I canโt help wondering if there would be more impact if the stories had been alternatively grouped to convey a stronger message.
For example, they could have been grouped by province โ would those who were born in Ontario have a different experience than those in Winnipeg? Ordering by service branch would be an obvious option but might negate some of the commonalities across branches. One could organize by a dozen other possibilities too, such as their posting, occupation, age at induction, future careers, whether they went overseas, etc.
In the end, the challenge might just be the biographical genre. Given the wealth of information, I found myself wanting to see some analysis across the anthology that you could digest and pull out, rather than just the raw text. But that would be a different text then, perhaps one more for academics to produce. And absent the analysis, I wanted to see different ways of sorting โ but that too would be a different publication, more of a database than a book.
Disclosure
I am personal friends with the editor.
The Bottom Line
A great resource somewhat limited by format.