
Dorothea Barron (2nd right) poses for a picture with her colleagues. — Screengrab/YouTube/@AFP/File
#loses #war #centenarian #WWII #veteran
Harlow, Britain: 100 -year -old Dorotia Baron has experienced a sense of satisfaction that he experienced that he had ended at the end of World War II.
“Thanks to goodness that is over,” the British Navy remembers the experienced thinking.
That same year, the high-speed centennial-year-old, who now teaches yoga and saw a large number of veterans with the first memories of the warfare, with the first memories of the war.
OK, how many former WWII service people are in the UK are unknown.
Although experts estimate there are still several thousand, which is marked on May 8, the 80th anniversary of victory in Europe’s day, with a quite experienced presence, the last major British war will be included in the memories.
Since Britain on Monday’s four -day celebrations – including military parade, fly paste and street parties – Baron told AFP how it felt that the war had eliminated its teenage era.
This news has emerged as a “release, tremendous weight from your shoulders”.
But he also pointed out a sudden change for members of the armed forces.
“Keep this’ uniform, some clothing coupons here, some food coupons, go home.” And that was all, “said Baron.
At the age of 20, he had no idea how difficult life would be in Britain after the war. Baron said it was a “very difficult” away.
“I won’t say unhappy, but there were uncertainty. You never knew what you were being killed the next day.”
‘I look cute’
Talking to his home near Harlow, north of London, Baron remembered the years of war after the war with extraordinary Wim.
She has been teaching yoga for 60 years, and every Monday holds a class near her home.
Its flexibility – as it is presented by the dog below, is with heels on the floor and is absolutely flat – even affects its young students.
“Can you feel it in the back of your feet?” He asked in a recent class.
“If you want a strong breast, it’s packed.”
Then as he left home, he said, “I feel beautiful, comfortable and enhanced.”
The barren version joins
Baron flew his 100th birthday in a spot fire in October 2024, celebrating a Royal Air Force plane that played a vital role in the British war against the German elevator in 1940.
He surprised, “It was really amazingly interesting.”
Today, with such energy, it is easy to imagine Baron’s commitment at the age of 18.
She wanted to be “intensely” in the women’s Royal Naval Service, or Wire, as she was known.
“We were not occupying the Nazis in our country,” he said.
But Baron feared he was very little to make a cut.
He said, “I cheated like crazy and cut the cardboard heels and looked tall me. And I made my hair, making it puff.”
“I was just five feet two inches (157 cm), but I think he saw that I was so keen to become a Verin that he thought that ‘we would let him go through it’.”
Baron taught how to communicate using visual gestures and Morse Code.
And before the DD Normundi landing, he helped check the ports of portable mulberry, which were tied to the English channel and a large number of troops and vehicles were allowed to arrive in France.
But she did not know what the structures were at the time, and only later I realized how they had been deployed.
“I was happy instead,” he said. “I thought: ‘Oh, I did something useful then.”
He planned to plan a victory in Europe on the Netherlands on the Netherlands on May 8, before participating in a service in Westminster Abe, in which the British royal family will also attend.
During the war, Baron met her husband Andrew, who was in the Royal Air Force.
They had two daughters, and Baron is now a grandmother. Andrew passed away in 2021, and Baron still talks about it.
It takes a long time to stop Baron from getting pleasant, but he is worried about the current events – especially Russia’s attack on Ukraine, which has once again rescued the conflict in Europe.
He said, “No one wins the war. Everyone loses.”