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King George VI Speech Broadcast
on VJ (Victory over Japan) Day, 15 August 1945
Three months have passed since I asked you to join with me in an act of
thanksgiving for the defeat of Germany.We then rejoiced that
peace had returned to Europe, but we knew that a
strong and relentless enemy still remained to be conquered in
Asia. None could then tell how long or how
heavy would prove the struggle that still
awaited us. Japan has surrendered, so let us
join in thanking Almighty God that war has
ended throughout the world, and that in every country men may now turn
their industry, skill, and science to
repairing its frightful devastation and to building
prosperity and happiness. Our sense of
deliverance is overpowering, and with it all, we have a right to
feel that we have done our duty. I ask
you again at this solemn hour to remember all who have laid down their
lives, and all who have endured the loss of those they love.
Remember, too, the sufferings of those who
fell into the hands of the enemy, whether as
prisoners of war or because their homes had been overrun. They have been
in our thoughts all through these dark years, and let us pray
that one result of the defeat of Japan may be
many happy reunions of those who have been
long separated from each other. The campaigns
in the Far East will be famous in history for many reasons.
There is one feature of them which is a special source of pride
to me, and also to you, the citizens of our
British Commonwealth and Empire to whom I
speak. In those campaigns there have fought, side by side with our
allies, representatives of almost every unit
in our great community - men from the Old
Country, men from the Dominions, from India, and the Colonies. They
fought in brotherhood; through their courage and endurance they
conquered. To all of them and to the women who
shared with them the hardships and dangers of
war I send my proud and grateful thanks. The
war is over. You know, I think, that those four words have for The Queen
and myself the same significance, simple yet immense, that they
have for you. Our hearts are full to
overflowing, as are your own. Yet there is not one of us
who has experienced this terrible war who does not realize that
we shall feel its inevitable consequences long
after we have all forgotten our rejoicings of
today. But that relief from past dangers must
not blind us to the demands of the future. The
British people here at home have added lustre to the true fame of
our Islands, and we stand today with our whole Empire in the
forefront of the victorious United Nations.
Great, therefore, is our responsibility to make sure
by the actions of every man and every woman here and throughout
the Empire and Commonwealth that the peace
gained amid measureless trials and suffering
shall not be cast away.VI In many anxious
times in our long history the unconquerable spirit of our
peoples has served us well, bringing us to safety out of great
peril. Yet I doubt if anything in all that has
gone before has matched the enduring courage and
the quiet determination which you have shown during these last
six years. It is of this unconquerable spirit
that I would speak to you tonight. For great as are
the deeds that you have done, there must be no falling off from
this high endeavour. We have spent freely of
all that we had: now we shall have to work
hard to restore what has been lost, and to establish peace on the
unshakeable foundations, not alone of material strength, but also
of moral authority. Then, indeed, the curse of
war may be lifted from the world, and States
and peoples, great and small, may dwell together through long periods
of tranquillity in brighter and better days than we ourselves
have known. The world has come to look for
certain things, for certain qualities from the
peoples of the Commonwealth and Empire. We have our part to play in
restoring the shattered fabric of civilisation. It is a proud and
difficult part, and if you carry on in the
years to come as you have done so splendidly in the
war, you and your children can look forward to the future, not
with fear, but with high hopes of a surer
happiness for all. It is to this great task that I call
you now, and I know that I shall not call in vain.
In the meantime, from the bottom of my heart I thank my Peoples
for all they have done, not only for
themselves but for mankind.

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