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Wild Isle: discovering Shetland

Our writer finds tales of wartime valour & Vikings in the Shetland Isles

September 9, 2018 07:25
St Ninian's Isle - Courtesy of P.Tomkins _ VisitScotland
4 min read

Home to the northernmost point of the British Isles, the Shetland Islands are so far north that culturally, they have much in common with their neighbour Norway.

And during the Second World War, this special relationship came to the fore when Shetland became the headquarters of a mysterious, classified and extremely dangerous operation known as the Shetland Bus.

After Norway was occupied by Nazi Germany in April 1940, the Shetland Bus became a lifeline for refugees to escape from Norway to the UK, and a covert link to transport undercover agents, radio operators, instructors, weapons, ammunition and equipment back in support of the Allied cause and the Norwegian resistance.

Over 350 refugees were saved, most of them fugitives from the Gestapo and many of them Jews, with the Norwegian resistance movement collectively recognised by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.