How a Bible lost in WWII finally made it home, tinsel and all - Action News
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Nova Scotia

How a Bible lost in WWII finally made it home, tinsel and all

Seventy-three years ago, a member of an Australian naval unit found it in an encampment vacated by Canadian soldiers. Last week, the small family Bible arrived in the mail at Keith Browns home in South Bar, N.S.

Former soldier living in Australia elated New Testament he found in 1944 is back in Cape Breton

Keith Brown holds the Bible belonging to his father, Sgt. Robert Brown, and the tinsel found between the pages. (Hal Higgins/CBC)

Last week, a small family Bible arrived in the mail at Keith Brown's home in South Bar, N.S.

His late father carried it during the Second World War, but only 73 years later hadit finally made its return to Cape Breton.

"I had been doing family research and been writing the family story," Brown said. "Now, there's a whole new chapter of the story."

That story starts in June 1944 with Leslie Wade, who was serving with a special Australian naval unit and found the Bible in anencampment in England.

Wade, now 99 years old, kept it.

The British national emigrated to Australia after the war, and over the years hadtried a couple of times to find the Bible's owner, but with little luck.

Sapper R.M. Brown

Through an inscription written inside the front cover, Wade knew it was once the property of "Sapper R.M. Brown, Third Division, Canadian Army."A sapper was a combat engineer whomostly builtbridges for military purposes or, in some instances, demolished bridgesto prevent the enemy from using them.

It wasn't until after Wade's granddaughter, Laura Condely, of Heidelberg,Australia, got involved that the mystery of the Bible was solved. She and her 11-year-old daughter, who was doing a school project on immigration, went to see Wade to learn about his experience as an immigrant.

When the subject of the Bible came up, Condelywent on Facebook and contacted many of her friends, including some in Canada, seeking help in tracking down the owner.

Then came a breakthrough. One person contacted a Nova Scotia historicalsociety, which then got in touch with Keith Brown.The Bible was that of his father, Sgt. Robert Brown.

Sgt. Robert Brown was in a military encampment next to Leslie Wade in June of 1944 when he lost a Bible given to him by his family.

Wade told CBC Cape Breton'sInformation Morninghe discovered the Bible after he and his unit arrived in 1944 toan encampmentin a place namedSelseyBill in the south of England. It was just before D-Day.

The encampment hadpreviously been occupiedby Canadian soldiers and was covered with "litter."Among items left behind were tools and several cans of beer, and a New Testament lying on the ground.

"I put it in my pocket and when I returned to [home base] I just dropped it in my kit bag," Wadesaid, assuming it would not have been dropped or thrown away on purpose.

A piece of tinsel

Wade and members of his unit were divers who werecalled "frogmen." Theytook to the water on D-Day to defuse some of the mines floating near Juno Beach to make way for the Canadian attack.

Wade was hit in theface and hip with shrapnel and he wasshipped back to England to recover.

He said prior to the invasion hewas on a ship packed with Canadians, maybe even the same landing craft as Robert Brown.

One curious feature about the Bible is a piece of "tinsel" placed between pages 288 and 289. Wade suspects that the passages therein, Acts 4: verses 1-27 held some particular significance for Robert Brown.

There was an Allied practice of dropping bomber loads of "tinsel" to confuse the German radar, Wade said. Pieces were about as big as a thumbnail foil on one side, black on the other sort of like a metal snowflake. It was one of these that he found inside the Bible.

Brown reads from the Bible, which was recently returned to the family after a 73-year absence. (Hal Higgins/CBC)

Keith Brown saidhe has no idea if it contains any special meaning.

"Only one person knows that and he died 45 years ago," he said of his father.

Wade said the Bible "belongs" in Cape Breton and he's pleased it's been returned. His granddaughter said he had tears in his eyes when he was told it had been returned.

"I heard him sigh. And it was a sigh of joy, but also of relief. It was so special," said Condely.

She said her grandfather's quest has brought her family and friends closer together.

For Keith Brown, it means the joining of two families across two hemispheres.

"I think the descendants of Leslie Wade and Robert Brown who almost met the day before D-Day, and perhaps were on the same ship on D-Day, which was my father's 28th birthday, I think the descendants will reconnect in Australia and Canada and we'll get other stories to tell," he said.

With files from Information Morning