Leader comment: We should grieve the deaths of old enemies
However, as often happens in war, but only rarely in war films, things did not go to plan.
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Hide AdUnable to find their target, they dropped their bombs on farmland, but were killed when their plane crashed into a hill in the Pentlands.
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Hide AdNow it has emerged the son of Oberstleutnant Fritz Förster, one of those who died, and nine other family members attended the unveiling of a memorial at the crash site, following its rediscovery.
It is a lifetime ago that millions perished as the world ripped itself apart, but their relatives still remember and, at times, still grieve.
Many older Scots will empathise with Mr Förster’s son Klaus. Younger generations would do well to try to do likewise.
Understanding something of the suffering caused by just one such death is important in a Europe where rising right-wing nationalism has led the eminent WWI historian Margaret Macmillan to warn we are in danger of repeating the mistakes of the past.