. MM. ,...4. i r_..._ . A ‘ C . ; I, ' 3 ~:"“‘.. _ ; ‘ '- 1 ,-_,,:,,:',__,,4,_,...., _ . ... ...4v m.'_”_ I Radio address. 27thFebruery, 1959. Good Evening Friends, I am tonight speaking for and on behelf of the friends Of the Maekenzie~Papineau Battalion in Spain.% These are the Canadian boys who felt they had a duty to perform, and who voluntarily left eanasa to fight in Spain in resisting the further encroeching of fascist states on democratic countries. it i Thev have been granted oermissien bv the Civic Charities Bureau J _. -. v g%+ithose now returning from Spain} This permission is only grented \ «t12u5° e~after it has been established that there is a need for a tag day, endhthere ‘ gg~c$e§s. These men, some of whom have already returned, while others are now :g_gthese who erereturning home, to fespondigeneronsly to the aepealithet is; Edie some claim on the yublic generosity to do something tggwthosewretanehag { tere broken in health. -country, and even those who might now be able to take work sillfind it;,tr,_elot ofought — the meintenenceiofgaedemocretic institution§~ seemg non to be lost now being made for assistance. on their way back, are suffering from war wounds, disabilities, and certainly They are desperately in need of assistence. A large number of them were unemployed before they left thisge§¥e§ difficult to procure any with'so much unemployment in this eonntry. " “They “ % have no government to take responsibility for them . d see that they get the ~v ‘ v,/g / in_Spain,the blame cannot be laid at their door. o£ Meny of then gave theiri all end~heve their graves in Spanish soil, never to return home again. i**”'t Wfinder these circumstances I feel sure the citizens of %innipegi and thgse within hearing of my voice,-havewonly to be told of the needs oft