Valor Friday

Pilot Officer Andrew Mynarski VC, RCAF
Today I present something a bit different. If you haven’t discovered the YouTube Yarnhub channel, you’re missing out. They do 3D animated military history videos that are overall very good. A recent video highlighted the actions of Andrew Mynarski. He was a Royal Canadian Air Force airman who was mortally wounded when his Lancaster bomber was shot down over occupied France. He died of his wounds received when he attempted to save the life of his comrade who was stuck in the tail gunner’s seat when their ship went down. Amazingly, the tail gunner survived (and aside from him, all the other men made it out), and was able to tell the story of Mynarski’s valiant effort to get him out (and which resulted in Mynarski’s fatal wounds). For his rescue attempt, Mynarski was posthumously awarded the Commonwealth’s highest award the Victoria Cross.
Here’s the Yarnhub story;
There’s a powerful statute, unveiled in 2014, in Vimy Ridge Park in Mynarski’s native Winnipeg that highlights his bravery. Ax in hand, Mynarski’s other hand is extended as if to pull Brophy from the doomed aircraft.
Another statue, at Teesside Airport in the UK, memorializes Mynarski in his final salute, which was how Brophy last saw the young man.
Read more about Mynarski (including his final letters home) here at the 17 Wing Voxair webpage.

Reverse of Mynarski’s actual Victoria Cross
Mynarski’s Victoria Cross award citation;
Pilot Officer Mynarski was the mid-upper gunner of a Lancaster aircraft, detailed to attack a target at Cambrai in France, on the night of 12th June, 1944. The aircraft was attacked from below and astern by an enemy fighter and ultimately came down in flames. As an immediate result of the attack, both port engines failed. Fire broke out between the mid-upper turret and the rear turret, as well as in the port wing. The flames soon became fierce and the captain ordered the crew to abandon the aircraft. Pilot Officer Mynarski left his turret and went towards the escape hatch. He then saw that the rear gunner was still in his turret and apparently unable to leave it. The turret was, in fact, immovable, since the hydraulic gear had been put out of action when the port engines failed, and the manual gear had been broken by the gunner in his attempts to escape. Without hesitation, Pilot Officer Mynarski made his way through the flames in an endeavour to reach the rear turret and release the gunner. Whilst so doing, his parachute and his clothing, up to the waist, were set on fire. All his efforts to move the turret and free the gunner were in vain. Eventually the rear gunner clearly indicated to him that there was nothing more he could do and that he should try to save his own life. Pilot Officer Mynarski reluctantly went back through flames to the escape hatch. There, as a last gesture to the trapped gunner, he turned towards him, stood to attention in his flaming clothing and saluted, before he jumped out of the aircraft. Pilot Officer Mynarski’s descent was seen by French people on the ground. Both his parachute and his clothing were on fire. He was found eventually by the French, but was so severely burned that he died from his injuries. The rear gunner had a miraculous escape when the aircraft crashed. He subsequently testified that, had Pilot Officer Mynarski not attempted to save his comrade’s life, he could have left the aircraft in safety and would, doubtless, have escaped death. Pilot Officer Mynarski must have been fully aware that in trying to free the rear gunner he was almost certain to lose his own life. Despite this, with outstanding courage and complete disregard for his own safety, he went to the rescue. Willingly accepting the danger, Pilot Officer Mynarski lost his life by a most conspicuous act of heroism which called for valour of the highest order.
Category: Air Force, Canada, Historical, UK and Commonwealth Awards, Valor, We Remember
“…no greater love…”
Slow Salute.
Thanks, again, Mason.
Thank you, Pilot Officer Mynarski.
Salute.
Yarnhub is an excellent channel. My YT feed is so overwhelmed by the number of channels I’m subscribed to that none of their videos have been recommended for a while, so I’ll check this one out.
That such men lived is extraordinary. That they are remembered over 80 years later and paid homage to by modern creators, with nearly a million views within a week shows that many of us want to learn of the exploits of men braver and more selfless than ourselves.