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99 year old war veteran and last remaining member of regiment, Jack Mann, lays wreath at Jewish Care Remembrance Sunday services

Jack Mann former SAS special forces veteran lays wreath at Jewish Care Remebrance Sunday service photo by Yakir Zur 3

Two 99-year-old World War ll veterans played a leading role in Jewish Care’s Remembrance Sunday commemorations to remember the sacrifice of those people who have fought to preserve our freedoms.

Jack Mann, 99 was a radio operator in World War II who is the last surviving member of his regiment the Long Range Desert Group. He later joined the SAS after the war, was part of the Special Air Service and Leslie Bernard, who was awarded the Legion d’Honneure for his services, as well as Moishe Freeman, a leading signalman in the Royal Navy, laid wreaths at care and community campuses run by Jewish Care, the largest health and social care organisation in the UK.

Jack Mann was part of the Long Range Desert Group, a British Army special forces unit that carried out raiding missions behind enemy lines. Jack says, “I joined the forces to fight the enemy – the Nazis. And they said ‘We’ve got a job for you. You’ll go into the special forces and you’ll see plenty of action.”

From there, he went on to join the SAS and then the Special Boat Service.

His time in the military took him to North Africa, the Middle East, Greek islands, Libya and Cyprus. He undertook a parachute course. The training included jumping out of a truck at 20 miles an hour and jumping off the top of a ladder, about 5 metres high, without a harness. Despite a distinguished military career under his belt, Jack says, “I can’t say I’m a hero. My job was communications, and that’s what I did.”

Moishe Freeman, also 99, was born on 3 August 2025. He joined the Royal Navy just before his 17th birthday, he says, “When I saw the bombing in London, I decided to join the forces. Everyone was going into the Royal Air Force, but they wouldn’t accept me as my father wasn’t English, so I decided to volunteer for the Royal Navy instead.”

After a year as a sailor, he became the ship’s leading signalman aboard The London, and was posted to India, Myanmar (Burma), Australia, South Africa and Sri Lanka. “Coming from a very poor family, it was the first time that I had my own bed, although it was actually a hammock which I managed to fall out of three times. I was also eating good food regularly.

Moishe tries not to dwell on the tragedy of what he saw, while fighting for his country, and says, “It is an immense honour to be asked to lay the wreath at the Remembrance Sunday service for the residents and their relatives, volunteers and staff at The Betty and Asher Loftus Centre, and I have to say it will be an immense pleasure for me to do it.

“I personally can recall my friends being killed during the War, I saw a close friend of mine killed in action, and laying this wreath will bring back the close memories we had. And that’s something that I will always remember.”

Moishe was awarded six medals for his service in the English Channel, Pacific Ocean, the Far East, Burma, for fighting in World War II and for achieving victory.

Residents from The Betty Asher Loftus Centre took part in the services. Michael Clifton, a Senior Aircraftsman during his National Service in the 1950’s, and Sheila Golding, who father served in the trenches and brother, served in World War II, were both mentioned in dispatches for their bravery. Melvin Goldberg, who did his National Service in the 1950’s, played the “Last Post” on trumpet.

At Jewish Care’s Sandringham, alongside Jack Mann, Leslie Bernard, who was awarded the Legion d’Honneur, the highest French decoration and the most famous in the world, for his excellent military conduct, also laid a wreath during the service at Jewish Care’s Sandringham, which was attended by over 90 people.

Leslie was born in 1926 and joined the Army in 1944 where he trained as part of the East Yorkshire Regiment in a reinforcement group, due to there being heavy casualties in Normandy and the Falaise campaign. Later that year, Leslie joined the rest of his regiment in Holland as a Bren Gunner after completing his training, here he took part in the liberation of the Holland Campaign and went onwards into Germany. After the war, Leslie completed postings in Africa. In 1948, he was

demobbed and arrived back in the UK, where his family moved from Leeds to Blackpool and changed their surname from Lubovich to Bernard.

Leslie said, “I went to war as Leslie Lubovich from Leeds and came back as Leslie Bernard from Blackpool!”

Leslie was awarded the Legion of Honor, the highest French decoration and the most famous in the world, for his excellent military conduct.

Jewish Care CEO, Daniel Carmel-Brown, said, “We are honoured to have among those we care for and support, ex-serviceman and women who fought for us and we owe a debt of gratitude to them, and to those who lost their lives, so that we could live in peace. The number of those who are able to share their stories with us is decreasing. It is so important for us to pay tribute to the courage of those who served during the wars and since. We continue to be inspired by them and the memory of those who sadly lost their lives over the years, as we mark Remembrance Sunday as a community together. We continue to think of all those caught in conflict, and hope for peaceful days ahead.”

Speaking at Jewish Care’s Holocaust Survivors’ Centre at a memorial service marking Kristallnacht,101 year-old veteran and Holocaust survivor, Henny Franks, shared her memories.

Henny said, “I remember Kristallnacht. I come from Cologne, Germany. I had two younger siblings who went to the Jewish school that the Nazi’s smashed when they burnt the synagogues, Jewish buildings and schools. My family hid on the rooftops that day. It was after that my parents decided to send us, their three children away to the England on the Kindertransport. I didn’t realise what it must have been like, so tough for them to send their three children away, of 12, 14 and 15. I never saw my father again.”

Tragically, Henny’s father, Jacob Grünbaum was arrested, deported to Sobibor and murdered by the Nazi’s. Henny and her siblings were reunited with her mother who narrowly escaped Germany during the War and made a life here in the UK.

Henny joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) in the British Army at 16. where she learned to drive lorries moving ammunition. She says, “I was glad to be in the

army. I got on with people and I also met my husband there, he also served in the army. I felt so proud and I’m still proud I’ve been in the Army. I’ve done my bit.”

CACI

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