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'''''Soldier''''' is a song written and recorded by [[Harvey Andrews]] in 1972 [http://www.harveyandrews.com/sounds/Writer/Harvey%20Andrews%20-%20Writer%20Of%20Songs%20-%20Soldier.mp3 (mp3 clip)].
'''''Soldier''''' is a song written and recorded by [[Harvey Andrews]] in 1972 [http://www.harveyandrews.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/harvey-andrews-writer-of-songs-soldier.mp3 (mp3 clip)].


The song was inspired by an event which happened in [[Belfast]], [[Northern Ireland]]. In 1971 [[Sergeant]] [[Michael Willetts]] of [[Parachute Regiment (United Kingdom)|3 PARA]] cleared a room in Springfield Road [[Royal Ulster Constabulary|RUC]] Police Station of civilians because a bomb with a short burning fuse had been planted by the [[Provisional IRA]]. After the room had been cleared, Sgt Willetts then slammed the door to the room which contained the bomb, but realising the door was not strong enough to absorb the blast, he pressed his body against the door, shielding the people on the other side. The charge exploded, and he was killed instantly.
The song was inspired by an event which happened in [[Belfast]], [[Northern Ireland]]. In 1971 [[Sergeant]] [[Michael Willetts]] of [[Parachute Regiment (United Kingdom)|3 PARA]] cleared a room in Springfield Road [[Royal Ulster Constabulary|RUC]] Police Station of civilians because a bomb with a short burning fuse had been planted by the [[Provisional IRA]]. After the room had been cleared, Sgt Willetts then slammed the door to the room which contained the bomb, but realising the door was not strong enough to absorb the blast, he pressed his body against the door, shielding the people on the other side. The charge exploded, and he was killed instantly.

Revision as of 22:09, 17 February 2011

Soldier is a song written and recorded by Harvey Andrews in 1972 (mp3 clip).

The song was inspired by an event which happened in Belfast, Northern Ireland. In 1971 Sergeant Michael Willetts of 3 PARA cleared a room in Springfield Road RUC Police Station of civilians because a bomb with a short burning fuse had been planted by the Provisional IRA. After the room had been cleared, Sgt Willetts then slammed the door to the room which contained the bomb, but realising the door was not strong enough to absorb the blast, he pressed his body against the door, shielding the people on the other side. The charge exploded, and he was killed instantly.

Harvey Andrews was so struck by the incident that he wrote the song to highlight the senselessness of violence and to make the point that soldiers, too, are human, and that Sgt Willetts had laid down his life for people who considered British soldiers to be nothing more than "murderers." (The incident of the soldier embracing the bomb was poetic licence.) Broadcasts of Andrews' record were banned for some time by the BBC lest feelings be exacerbated in the nationalist community of Northern Ireland, or the British public be incited to attack innocent Irish people. The Ministry of Defence advised (and still advises) British soldiers not to sing the song in pubs where it may incite strong emotive behaviour. Some have interpreted this as a ban.

Harvey Andrews' authorship is not always widely known, and many different, incorrect stories about the song's origin circulate. Harvey Andrews intended the song to transcend sectarianism, but some have wrongly interpreted it as the glorification of military heroism.

References

Brummie heroes. Harvey Andrews On the 15th of August there was an explosion in Ireland.