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Time to honour Jane Haining, Scotland's Schindler

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Published Date: 27 January 2009
SHE has been described as Scotland's Schindler for refusing to abandon dozens of Jewish orphans in Budapest during the Second World War.
But Jane Haining, who paid for her beliefs with her life, has yet to be formally recognised in Britain for her heroic deeds.

Today, as Britain marks Holocaust Memorial Day, The Scotsman joins senior politicians in calling for a change in the honours system so Ms Haining can be properly honoured for her courage and selflessness.

The Holocaust Education Trust's campaign today receives support from leading figures including Alex Salmond, the First Minister, and David Mundell, the shadow Scottish secretary.

And it has met with a sympathetic hearing from Gordon Brown, the Prime Minister, who has praised Ms Haining's heroic refusal to leave the children she was teaching when the Nazis invaded Hungary.

Ms Haining and the children were eventually sent to the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in Poland where it is believed their lives were ended in a gas chamber.

Jane Haining left her home in Dumfries in 1932 to work as a missionary in Hungary. At the outbreak of the Second World War she ignored orders and advice to return to Scotland.

Her half sister, Nan O'Brien, recalled when she made a pilgrimage to Auschwitz in 2000: "It was no surprise that she refused to come back when war was declared. She would never have had a moment's happiness if she had come home and left the children."

When Germany invaded Hungary in 1944 she was arrested along with the children and taken to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Her name is now inscribed near to Oskar Schindler's on the Holocaust memorial at Yad Vashem in Israel.

Schindler saved nearly 1,200 Jews by employing them in his ammunition and enamelware factory. The story was made famous in the film Schindler's List.

Ben Helfgott, a concentration camp survivor who was instrumental in getting Jewish recognition for Ms Haining, said: "When the children were taken away she went with them to Auschwitz. She was not able to save them, but she looked after them. What she did was a supreme act of mercy and kindness."

The campaign aims to gain honours for Ms Haining and five other Britons recognised in Israel as Righteous Among the Nations – a title for non-Jews who helped Jews during the Holocaust – but who have never received any formal, widespread recognition in their homeland.

The complex rules surrounding the Honours and Decoration Committee mean that currently people who have died cannot be honoured unless they lost their lives in combat.

The trust is now calling on the UK government to ask the committee to review the rules so that Ms Haining and the others, including Tommy Noble, a Scot, can be honoured posthumously because of the exceptional circumstances.

The Cabinet Office has refused to comment formally, but the campaign has been encouraged by the response from the Prime Minister who praised Ms Haining's bravery in his latest book, Wartime Courage: Stories of Extraordinary Courage by Ordinary Men and Women in World War Two.

He also spoke about Ms Haining on his first trip to Israel as Prime Minister last summer.

Mr Brown last night told The Scotsman: "The theme of this Holocaust Memorial Day is standing up to hatred. We all like to think that we know what we would do in the face of hatred – that in a moment of decision we would honour our obligations to resist brutality and to stand with its victims.

"That is why I so admire Scottish missionary Jane Haining who ran the Jewish Girls' Home in Budapest and refused all appeals to return to Scotland and to safety after the Nazis overran Hungary. She is a hero of which all Scotland and the world can be proud and I applaud the Holocaust Educational Trust for highlighting the courage of Jane and others like her who stood up to hatred."

The campaign has received the backing of Mr Salmond. He said: "Jane Haining was a truly remarkable Scot, whose extraordinary courage against tyranny and devotion to duty deserve to be remembered and properly recognised. This campaign, to allow the posthumous awarding of honours to people like Jane Haining, is a very worthy cause."

Labour East Renfrewshire MSP Ken Macintosh will this week put down a motion supporting the campaign calling for a change in the rules, which is expected to get widespread support from MSPs.

"It is absolutely right that we should not forget and properly honour people like Jane Haining and I fully support this campaign," he said. "While it is good that she and the others have been recognised in Israel, it is wrong that she has received no formal recognition in her own country."

Tavish Scott, leader of the Liberal Democrats in Scotland, is also supportive. He said: "It would be right to explore the potential to recognise outstanding bravery in the face of circumstances we cannot imagine."

There is recognition of Ms Haining's sacrifice in her native Dumfries, in the form of a plaque in her honour at the Kirk of Dunscore, where she worshipped.

Local Conservative MP David Mundell said that formal recognition for her was overdue.

"There is no doubt that she and the others like her deserve to be honoured in this country for the sacrifice they made."

The Church of Scotland has also thrown its weight behind the campaign.

Karen Pollock, the Holocaust Education Trust's chief executive, said: "We believe that the time is right to raise awareness of British Holocaust heroes and heroines.

"Their brave acts have never been appropriately recognised in this country so we are calling on the government to review the statutes so that these British heroes can receive a posthumous honour which they truly deserve."

BACKGROUND

THE Holocaust Education Trust was established in 1988 to promote awareness of Nazi atrocities during the Second World War. It is best known for organising trips to Auschwitz for young people aged 17 and 18 to help them to understand better what happened in the concentration and death camps.

The programme received a huge boost when it caught the attention of Gordon Brown, when he was chancellor, and won direct funding to roll it out across Britain.

The Department for Children, Schools and Families now helps to fund the visits of English youngsters, but last year trips for young Scots were under threat. After The Scotsman highlighted the possibility of the trips being cancelled, the Scottish Government agreed to provide funding.

The trust uses the experiences of Holocaust survivors and the visits to Auschwitz to teach students about the dangers of all kinds of prejudice and hatred. It was also instrumental in getting Tony Blair to inaugurate Holocaust Memorial Day.

The railway line to Auschwitz. More than a million people died there before the camp was liberated on 27 January, 1945
The railway line to Auschwitz. More than a million people died there before the camp was liberated on 27 January, 1945


Missionary died a martyr for her Jewish orphans

WHEN the Nazis entered Budapest in 1944, Jane Haining, a Scottish missionary, was given the chance to go home.

But she refused to abandon the Jewish orphans in her care and within months paid with her life for her decision in the gas chamber at Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Jane Haining was born in 1897 in Dunscore, Dumfries and Galloway, into a Presbyterian family.

In 1932, she volunteered to become matron of a girls' home run by the Scottish Mission School in Budapest, where she quickly became fluent in Hungarian. She was responsible for 50 of the schools and 400 pupils, most of whom were Jewish and many of whom were orphans.

At the outbreak of the Second World War, she was in Cornwall on holiday, but immediately returned to Budapest and ignored orders to return to Scotland.

She again refused to leave Hungary following the Nazi invasion in March 1944, saying: "If these children need me in the days of sunshine, how much more do they need me in the days of darkness."

She is said to have wept as she sewed the Star of David on to the uniforms of her wards.

But her letters show that even before war was declared she was preparing to stand by her wards.

During the dark days of 1938 and 1939, the number of Jewish refugees coming to the school increased, mostly children fleeing from the Nazis in Austria.

She became aware that the Church of Scotland Mission had become a place of sanctuary.

She wrote: "What a ghastly feeling it must be to know that no-one wants you and to feel that your neighbours literally grudge you your daily bread."

In April 1944, she was arrested for a series of trumped-up offences, including working with Jews and listening to the BBC. At first she was imprisoned in Buda, before being sent to the holding camp at Kistarcsa, and finally, in May 1944, she was taken by train to the infamous death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Although she was not sent immediately to the gas chambers, her letters from Auschwitz show clearly that she was starving, writing obsessively to her friend Margrit about apples, fresh fruit and bread.

She died in July 1944, officially of "cachexia following intestinal catarrh." However, according to Charles Walker's 1988 book, Legacy of Scots, Miss Haining was probably gassed along with a batch of Hungarian women on 16 August, 1944.

One of her former wards later recalled: "I still feel the tears in my eyes and hear in my ears the siren of the Gestapo motor car. I see the smile on her face while she bade me farewell. I never saw Miss Haining again, and when I went to the Scottish Mission to ask the minister about her, I was told she had died. I did not want to believe it, nor to understand, but a long time later I realised that she had died for me, and for others.

"The body of Miss Haining is dead, but she is not alone, because her smile, voice and face are still in my heart."

There are two memorials to Jane Haining – stained glass windows in Queen's Park church, Glasgow, where she worshipped, and a plaque in the little Kirk of Dunscore.

FACT BOX

THE Scotsman has joined the Holocaust Education Trust in calling for a review of the rules of the UK government's honours and decorations committee.

Currently, they do not allow posthumous awards unless the death was in combat.

We want the rules to be amended so that honours can be awarded posthumously in exceptional circumstances.


The others who deserve our recognition

FRANK FOLEY: Known as the Stourbridge Schindler, he was a British secret intelligence service officer who used his role as a passport control officer to help thousands of Jews escape from Nazi Germany. He died in 1958.

ROBERT SMALLBONES: As the Consul-General in Frankfurt-am-Main, he helped Mr Foley to save thousands of Jews by arranging papers for them to come to Britain.

RANDOLPH CHURCHILL: The son of the wartime prime minister, Winston Churchill, is on the list for his work in 1944 in Yugoslavia, where he set up a military mission after volunteering to be parachuted behind enemy lines with the author Evelyn Waugh.

CHARLES COWARD: Known as the Count of Auschwitz. After numerous PoW escape attempts, Sergeant Coward was transferred to Auschwitz III, a Labour camp. There he managed to smuggle food to Jews and even got dynamite to help the Sonderkommando rebellion in a partially successful attempt to blow up the gas chambers. At the end of the war he is believed to have saved 400 Jews by giving them documents from dead non-Jews.

TOMMY NOBLE: Another Scot, he was among a group of British PoWs who found a Jewish girl, Sarah Hannah Rigler (née Matuson), who had escaped from a death march. They hid and fed her in camp and saved her life.


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  • Last Updated: 27 January 2009 4:39 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Holocaust
 
1

,

27/01/2009 00:27:59
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2

,

27/01/2009 00:33:56
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3

W Smith,

Middle East 27/01/2009 03:12:44
Looks like the Scottish Toriew were correct.

Here we have a nationalist at #3 who uses the term jewish and Zionist interchangeably.

SO socialism was invented by Karl Marx the Zionist then, eh Salmond?

That make socialism a dicredited unworkable Zionist ideology.

GOOD.

Nothing like joined up thinking from the left wing SNP.

BTW
If its a crime to train children for war (see article about Lubanga) then doesn't that mean that what Hamas have been doing is "illegal"?

SO the SNP will be organising a public demonstration about this then, eh Salmond?

AYE RIGHT.
4

The Pict.,

Canada/Edinburgh 27/01/2009 03:58:42
Perhaps Mr. Smith you might consider getting the occupation of Palestine FINISHED. That way the Palestinians, who were peaceful people until your zionist friends stole their land, can be peaceful once more. Then the first terrorist attack by on the King David Hotel by the Stern gang, including one of your prime ministers Menachen Began, can have a 'Terrorist Memorial Day celebrated with statues etc with the names of the British nurses they murdered on them.
Aye Right.
5

Lynne,

27/01/2009 04:49:19
THIS b-s about stealing land is just that. Jews have been a continuous presence in Israel for over 3,000 years.
They also bought land from the Turks,the Ottoman Empire) until they made it illegal to sell any more land to Jews. They were given an desert, and made it an oasis.

If you think that the 3,000 years was a cake walk for them.. just see who they have outlasted..


Ancient Egypt, Philistines, Assyrian Empire, Babylonian Empire, Persian Empire, Greek Emprie, Roman Empire, Byzantine Empire, Crusaders, Spanish Empire, Nazi Germany, Soviet Union, and now Hamas and Hizbollah.

Not enough people out to destroy a people and nation for you?

Sad, how some of you think.

The Arabs could have had a state along side Israel three times already, but they preferred going to war.


6

Lynne,

27/01/2009 04:55:36
The rules should be changed and the woman should be honored.. she is a heroine.
7

Scotindy,

Los Angeles 27/01/2009 06:02:40
# 7 Agreed. Where if anywhere is her body? That Iam sure will never be found, but her memory will never be forgotten. What a great SCOTTISH LADY.
8

Murray in Canada,

Salt Spring Island 27/01/2009 06:18:45
What ARE the rules, and who makes them? I can't see how there is a problem. Change the rules, set a precedent maybe - or is that a fearful thing to contemplate?
9

Saul Tyre,

Germany 27/01/2009 06:19:31
Jane Haining should definitely honoured and her story made known to a wider public.

#4 Off topic and off his head.
10

El Sabio,

Sandton 27/01/2009 06:22:21
#5

Robert Mugabe was a terrorist and so was the late Joshua Nkomo. How many innocents do you think they murdered?

They were welcomed into the international community by your liberal lefties who wept for joy.

This present ANC government here also started off as a terrorist organisation.

Israel has a right to exist. Its destiny lies in its might and righteousness (David Ben Gurion)

Why do you think it is the policy to keep the unfortunate Palestinians in refugee camps?

Anwar Sadat was murdered by the Moslem Brotherhood for making peace with the Israelis. King Abdullah the great grandfather of the present king of Jordan was assassinated for negotiating with the Israelis.
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11

Dave Scott,

Broughty Ferry 27/01/2009 07:03:17
The Pict., Canada/Edinburgh 27/01/2009 03:58:42

Aye right to your version of history. Doesn't Atlit pre-date the attack on the King David Hotel?

You also ignore Black September ... peaceful?

Don't get me wrong, both sides have their criminals and provocateurs but why do you expect a higher standard of behaviour from Israel when we, either as Scotland or Britain, have failed to act humanely in many of our conflicts.

It's probably due to the aftermath of the Holocaust that we all had a deeper think about our humanity - which is what this article is really about.
12

Ham Mei Si,

Hong Kong 27/01/2009 08:10:39
A wonderful tribute to a Scottish woman loyal to God and her helpless orphans!
But we forget the crew of Aiberdeen fishermen who became sailors in the Kings navy and served aboard the HMS Hammond sunk in Norway in April 1940. All of them led by their Skipper, survived the sinking of their armed trawler and made it back to Britain to fight again!
Everyone of them were disgraced and humiliated by the Lords of the Admiralty. They were separated, and each dispatched to different naval stations so that they would never be in contact with each other again!
But after all, we have to remember, that these men were also survivors of the great depression, and lowly fishermen! Therefore considered unimportant. Aiberdeen fishermen almost forgotten like this wonderful lady Jane Haining!
13

Down-to-earth,

Warsaw 27/01/2009 08:34:59
She can be compared to Janusz Korczak, a great Jewish doctor and educator who accompanied his charges from the orphanage in the Warsaw ghetto to Auschwitz and died with them, although the Nazis had offered to release him. Both displayed a courage and devotion that no words can describe and both deserve to be honoured. If you ever visit Warsaw, there is a monument to Janusz Korczak in the Jewish Cemetery there. He is featured holding the youngest child in his arms while his other charges are clinging to him.
14

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 27/01/2009 08:49:44
She has no need of our debased baubles. Recognise and remember what she has done, and perhaps a few will be inspired rise to such occasions if we meet them.

How can she possible receive an honour from this country: she hasn't contributed to the Labour Party and she isn't a pop singer, TV personality, Hollywood actress or other form of celebrity.
15

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 27/01/2009 08:58:52
#3
Why should she be honoured by someone like you.

You can guarantee that if she were alive and in Gaza, she would put her life on the line for ANY child. Her heroism was unconditional.

I think she would look at some of the posters here as something she would scape off the sole of her shoe.
16

,

27/01/2009 09:21:41
Comment Removed By Administrator
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17

Number 6,

Germany 27/01/2009 09:24:24
Another great Scottish hero that practically no one has heard of. Well done to all those responsible for bringing this great woman to our attention.

#4 Smith: Once again you demonstrate your frothing at the mouth ignorance. The Gazza appeal is to help women and children who have suffered due to war. This is nothing to do with "supporting terrorists" or any other paranoid drivel.We are talking of the innocent here or are they all guilty , is that it?

How can it be ok to support victims of Darfur and the Congo etc but not the women and children of Gazza.

Is your hatred so ingrained that you would happily see them suffer further?. Not very humane is it?

Of course, as instructed by your unionista handlers, you have lashed out at Alex Salmond,as if he is somehow to blame. How pathetic and weak you sound.
18

Jock MacSprog,

27/01/2009 09:39:49
I think its embarassing how our press and certain sectors of our society are always looking for some obscure Scottish angle on stories many of which were topical years ago. Is it really that slow a news day ? The Scotsmans march toward tabloidism continues. News please and less of this fluff !
19

Mase,

London 27/01/2009 09:47:25
In addition to a plaque outside Dunscore Church, Jane Haining is commemorated on a plaque of notable pupils outside the main entrance to Dumfries Academy.
20

Number 6,

Germany 27/01/2009 09:56:31
#21 news just for you :

Across the UK, at all levels, the Labour party are denying multiple allegations of corruption. The allegations cover various stratas of Labour power, from inner-city councillors in Scotland, gorging on tax-payers money in order to enrich themselves and their families, to Labour members of the House of Lords, some of whom have been taped offering to table amendments to current laws in exchange for some very thick "brown envelopes".

As is traditional in these cases, all labour accused have denied any wrong doing .

These blanket denials to not seem to have been bought by the public with Labour now 15points behind the Conservative party. It is not known what effect these allegations are having on Labour's core Scottish support but one official shepherd has said :

"Och that's no botherin oor people. Ah tolt them it was aw lies and do you know whit? Ah think they believed me"

Film at eleven.

21

oder,

Scotland 27/01/2009 09:58:14
truly a remarkable woman! and is is often the case recognised in other countries before their own! their name shall remain forever honoured!


22

oder,

Scotland 27/01/2009 09:59:20
20 Number 6,Germany

you ask

"How can it be ok to support victims of Darfur and the Congo etc but not the women and children of Gazza."

the difference is that the people of the Congo and Darfur are victims of a non elected Government! therefore have no control over their actions. the Palestinains on the other hand have elected Hamas who have stated that war with Israel is the way forward!

war and suffering is the burden you carry when you take this path! Palestinains know it! Hamas know it! but nothing gets in the way of Islamic hatred of Israel.
23

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 27/01/2009 10:04:12
I find it difficult to believe that so many utter a***holes have posted vitriol in response to this story. This is about a woman's effort to look after little kids being recognised.

It has nothing to do with the situation in Gaza or anything else.

Now grow up the lot of you and start using your brains---if you have any.
24

Number 6,

Germany 27/01/2009 10:18:19
#25 Are you saying the women and children who have been killed or injured in this war deserve it ?.

Are you aware that no women and children were allowed to leave what is a war zone because the IDF would not allow it.

Who is to blame for Israel firing on schools and UN compounds. Get real, there is no defence for firing on innocent civillians in built up residential areas.

NO EXCUSE. When the British were fighting the IRA they never fired anything larger than a bullet. No grenades, no missiles, no bombs, no airstrikes and absolutley no phosporus.

These people need help, they are the victims of war. I am quite sure that Jane Haining would be appalled by the death and destruction the Israelis have wreaked on Gazza.

Gerald Kaufman, one of the UK's most prominent jewish politicians said the Isralies are no better than the
Nazis who pulled his Grandmother from her bed and shot her dead.

He went on to say that there is too much Gentile Guilt where Israel are concerned and it must stop, especially as Israel now has it's own Nazi gangs, complete with skinheads and swastika tattoos. Their victims are all non jews.

NO more sympathy or "Gentile Guilt" they no longer deserve it.
25

Paul Macdonald,

Gelsenkirchen 27/01/2009 11:07:03
Jane Haining is a great lady and we should recognise such bravery and the ultimate sacrifice.
However, what I find very curious is the timing of this story. We have just seen the Zionists that run Israel conduct a terrible war against a people who had nowhere to run and hardly anything to defend themselves. We see more and more stories of war crime charges being directed agaisnt Israel. It looks like Israel have lossed the PR war in Gaza. Somebody has turned over the page to see what we do when that happens. First of all we look for a few sob stories and there is nothing better than a local holocaust hero. The next one will be the increasing anti semetic attacks.
Have we become so cynical that instead of being proud of Jane Haining we immediately become suspicious of who placed the story and why did they release it now. Moreover, why did the Scotsman run it as one of their main stories. Is somebody else using Jane Haining's past for the wrong reasons? Shame on you.
26

CRAGman,

27/01/2009 11:37:20
You can still visit the Church of Scotland in Budapest beside which still stands the premises of the Scottish Mission School.
27

Lynne,

27/01/2009 13:02:34
Number 6, You see you're perpetrating another lie. It's Hamas who would not let women and children leave. It's Hamas who uses children to run guns for them, and collect them off dead bodies.
Israel used text messages, automated phone calls, and dropped hundreds of thousands of leaflets to tell people to get out of where they are.

You can't change the facts.
28

oder,

Scotland 27/01/2009 13:06:32
Number 6,Germany

"Are you saying the women and children who have been killed or injured in this war deserve it ?."

No! I am not! what I am saying is that it is incumbent on an elected government not to put their citizens at risk! Hamas the elected government (in Gaza) clearly is aware! as any government should be that when you wage war your enemy will attack, Hamas knows full well that the people had no where to go! yet they continued rocket attacks on Israel, what further proof do you need Hamas`s war is of greater importance for them than concern or dare I say love of their own people! the responsibility for it is the elected government of Hamas! the sufferings will continue until such time as Israel is destroyed! not likely to happen any time soon! or the world wakes up and puts an end to Islamic abuse of the Palestinians in their Jihad against Israel!

as for this "guilt" nonsense when Britain was at war with Germany they did not separate women and children, innocent and the guilty, German form Nazi We bombed the bloody lot! the Israeli`s are not better than anyone, but they certainly aren't worse than anyone else either!

all victims need assistance regardless of who they are!

Hamas does not appear to share that view!they are quite happy to allow Palestinians to suffer, their actions show it!
29

Number 6,

Germany 27/01/2009 14:09:52
#32 When it comes to spreading lies and dis-information, no one does it better than you.
Please, take your redneck mentality and head over to the Fox forums. There's no place for people like you on this site. For you to state that Israel is not preventing women and children from leaving the Gazza strip is just another of your hate filled lies.

You make me sick.

#33 Yes or no,is Israel justified in firing bombs into houses and schools, knowing they are full of women and children?

Can I remind you, this is 2009.
30

Scottie,

South Africa 27/01/2009 14:24:48
Lynne @ 6, sometime count up the number of countries that the tribes, that eventually made up the Tribes of Israel, invaded and destroyed in their early days before you cast any stones.

Palestine is named in the Old Testament before Israel, how much land has Israel taken from them during the lsat 20 years?
31

Scottie,

South Africa 27/01/2009 14:25:53
I'm sorry to admit that I'd never heard of this brave woman before today, and I'm grateful to have read of her now.

She should be remembered whenever brave and good people are listed.
32

Dylan fan,

Planet earth 27/01/2009 14:43:19

Why can't Scotland create it's own memorial? I mean does it have to be the UK honor to be meaningful?
33

oder,

Scotland 27/01/2009 15:27:17
35 Number 6,Germany

Yes or No as a democratically elected government Hamas
is not required or responsible for the safety of their citizens?

Yes or No is Hamas justified to fire rockets in residential areas were there are woman children schools...etc?


can I remind you!that right and wrong are not subject to the timeline!

your ignore the facts that are the cause of the conflict in the first place!to attempted to apply morality to the elected Israeli leaders!and have nothing to say in the case of
Hamas as elected leaders shows you are being less than impartial!


34

oder,

Scotland 27/01/2009 15:31:09
37 Scottie,South Africa

"Palestine is named in the Old Testament before Israel, how much land has Israel taken from them during the lsat 20 years?"

74% of the old testament land of Palestine in now in Jordan! can you explain why no Palestinian rockets are fired into Jordan? why no rush to have it back in the hands of Palestinians?
35

David Ban,

04620 Vera 27/01/2009 15:56:10
I had never heard of this courageous Scottish woman Jane Haining. Her love for her charges shows the best of human spirit. We in Scotland should honour such people with our own honours system and reinforce the memory with days of remembrance and make sure that such Scots are in the history we teach our children at school!
36

quercus,

U.S.A. 27/01/2009 16:02:34
So many "Comment(s) Removed By Administrator" on this subject. What ever happened to Scottish tolerance and intellect?

 
  

 
 


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