CHRISTMAS BROADCAST
THE KING'S MESSAGE
HOPE FOR THE FUTURE
LONDON, December 25. "Once more on Christmas Day , I speak to millions of you scattered far and near across the world," said the King, in his Christmas Day broadcast this afternoon. "As always, lam greatly moved by the thought that so vast a friendly audience hears the words I speak in this room, where,the Queen and I and our daughters are fortunate enough to be spending Christmas at home. I count it a high privi-' lege to be able to use these moments to send a Christmas message of goodwill to the men and women/ of whatever creed or colour, who may be listening to me throughout our. Commonwealth and Empire, on the battler field, on the high seas, or in foreign lands. "At this Christmas time we think proudly and gratefully of our fighting men, wherever they may be. May God bless and protect them, and bring them victory. Our message goes to all who are wounded or sick in hospital, and to the doctors and nurses in their labour of mercy. And our thoughts and prayers are also with, our men who are prisoners -of war and with their relatives in their loneliness and anxiety. To the children everywhere we wish all the happiness Christmas can bring. - "Among deepest sorrows we have felt in these years of, strife, and the one we feel most, is the grief of separation—families rent apart by the call of service, people sundered from people by the calamities that have overwhelmed some, while others have been free to continue the fight. "We rejoiced in the victories of this year, not least because they have broken down some of the barriers between us and our friends, and brought nearer the time when we can all be together again with those we love. For. the moment we have a foretaste of that joy, as we enter into the fellowship of Christmas Day. ■;..-■■•■ "At this great festival, more perhaps than at any other season of the year, we long for anew birth of. freedom and order among all nations, so that happiness and concord may pre-. vail and the scourge of war may be banished from our midst. Yet, though, human ingenuity can show us no short cut to that universal charity which is the very heart of the Christmas message, the goal is still clear before us, and I for one believe that these years of sacrifices and sorrow.have brought us nearer to it. "We do not know what awaits us when we open the door of 1945, but if we look back to those earlier Christmas days of the war, we can surely say the darkness daily, grows less and less. "The lamps which the Germans put out all over Europe, first in 1914 and then in 1939, are being slowly rekindled. Already we see some of them beginning to shine through the fog of war that still shrouds so many lands. Anxiety is giving way to confidence, and let us hope that before next Christmas Day, God willing, the story of liberation and triumph will be complete. Throughout the^Empire, men, women, boys, and girls, "through hard work and much self-sacrifice, have all helped to bring victory nearer. We have shared. many dangers, and the common effort has bound us together. Yet labour, devotion, patience, and tolerance -will still be needed for the experiment of living as nations together in harmony. • , "The defeat of Germany and Japan is only the first half of our task. The second is to create a world of free men, untouched by tyranny. We have great allies in this arduous enterprise of .the human spirit—man's 'unconquerable mind, and freedom's holy flame.' I believe that most surely we shall achieve that goal. In the meantime, in old words that never lose their force, I wish you from my heart a happy Christmas, and for the coming year a full measure of that courage and faith in God which alone .enables us to bear old sorrows and face new trials, until the day when the Christmas message, peace on earth, goodwill towards men, finally comes true." . The King made his broadcast from a house in the country. For the first time the Queen and the two Princesses were in the same room to hear the King deliver his Christmas message. His last broadcast was to the Home Guard on December 3, and before that he spoke to the Empire on the even- ' ing of D Day.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19441226.2.58
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 152, 26 December 1944, Page 4
Word Count
754CHRISTMAS BROADCAST Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 152, 26 December 1944, Page 4
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