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Britain’s bonfire of the atrocities | Britain’s bonfire of the atrocities |
(about 1 month later) | |
Destroyed documents | Football shirt dilemma | Wednesday misery | Awkward advert placement | Destroyed documents | Football shirt dilemma | Wednesday misery | Awkward advert placement |
Angela Blazy-O’Reilly reports that the war service of her mother was not recognised for extra pension rights, as “no records were available for [the Women’s Royal Army Corps] in India” (Letters, 11 May). I wonder if this was due to Operation Legacy, which mandated the destruction or hiding of colonial documents before Britain’s withdrawal from colonised countries. A sort of imperial “bonfire of the atrocities”, such as records of the Bengal famine in 1943. | |
Denis Jackson | |
Glasgow | |
My son, like me, has several Sheffield United shirts, which he wears with pride. The other day he asked me to buy him a French national shirt with “Mbappé 10” printed on the back (Letters, 7 May). Putting the cost (about £100) to one side for a moment, I’m genuinely unsure of what to do. Get him the shirt for Christmas, or send him to an orphanage? | |
Mark Redhead | |
Oxford | |
“Can watching sport really improve your wellbeing? The science suggests it can” says your headline (12 May). Did the researchers have any Sheffield Wednesday fans in their sample size? | |
Mike Elliott | |
Emeritus professor, and Wednesday fan since 1962, Leven, East Yorkshire | |
While still digesting the report about childhood eating patterns and junk food adverts in your print edition (Children eat more after five minutes of junk food ads – study, 12 May), I turned the page and saw a full-page ad for Burger King and Uber Eats. | |
Jude Carr | |
London | |
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