Radio Caledonia (1)
				              
    
        I was listening to a program recently on Radio 4. At the beginning
        there was a familiar voice – Lord Haw-Haw saying ‘Germany Calling,
        Germany Calling’. He was William Joyce, a broadcaster of Nazi
        propaganda during the Second World War.
    
    
        The program’s presenter reported that there was more than just Joyce
        involved in broadcasting of that type. There was even a Scot involved.
        He was from the Highlands.
    
    
        The rest of the program was about Donald Grant. He was born in Alness,
        in Easter Ross, in 1907. He created Radio Caledonia.
    
    
        Unlike Joyce, none of the broadcasts that Grant made exist today. But
        the woman on Radio 4 found transcripts of some of his programs. Donald
        was maintaining that he was a Scottish ‘nationalist’. But he was a
        Fascist. And the British spying services were familiar with him.
    
    
        Donald’s father was a grocer in Alness. Donald was a pupil in the
        Alness Public School and Dingwall Academy. He demonstrated at a young
        age that he had perverse views on politics. His opinions were so
        damnable that his father expelled him from the house.
    
    
        After school, he was working in England and Ireland. Then he was back
        in Alness for a while. Through most of the thirties he was in London.
        At that time, the Nazis and Fascists were on the rise throughout
        Europe.
    
    
        He and the head of Nazi propaganda, Rolf Hoffmann, were writing to each
        other. Donald was calling himself ‘Derrick’ at times – and also
        ‘British Fascist’. He had poisonous views on Jews.
    
    Grant was saying that he received an invitation to go and stay in Germany
    with a German family for four weeks. In the summer of 1939 he went there.
    Many people were fleeing from Germany at that time. We’ll see what happened
    to him next week.
				             
				            
				              Radio Caledonia (1)
				              
    Bha mi ag èisteachd ri prògram o chionn ghoirid air Rèidio 4. Aig an
    toiseach bha guth aithnichte ann – am Morair Haw-Haw ag aithris ‘Germany
    Calling, Germany Calling’. B’ esan Uilleam Joyce, craoladair propaganda
    Natsach anns an Dàrna Cogadh.
    Dh’inns tè-lìbhrigidh a’ phrògraim gun robh barrachd na dìreach Joyce an
    sàs ann an craoladh dhen t-seòrsa sin. Bha eadhon fear Albannach ann. ʼS
    ann às a’ Ghàidhealtachd a bha e.
    Bha an còrr dhen phrògram a-mach air Dòmhnall Grannd. Rugadh e ann an
    Alanais, ann an taobh an ear Rois, ann an naoi ceud deug ʼs a seachd
    (1907). Chruthaich e Radio Caledonia.
    Eucoltach ri Joyce, chan eil gin de na clàraidhean a rinn an Granndach ann
    am bith an-diugh. Ach lorg an tè air Rèidio 4 tar-sgrìobhaidhean de chuid
    de na prògraman aige. Bha Dòmhnall a’ cumail a-mach gun robh e na
    ‘nàiseantach’ Albannach. Ach ʼs e Faisisteach a bha ann. Agus bha na
    seirbheisean-brathaidh Breatannach eòlach air.
    Bha athair Dhòmhnaill na ghròsair ann an Alanais. Bha Dòmhnall na sgoilear
    ann an Sgoil Phoblach Alanais agus Acadamaidh Inbhir Pheofharain. Dhearbh e
    aig aois òg gun robh beachdan claon aige air poilitigs. Bha na beachdan
    aige cho damainte ʼs gun do chuir athair a-mach às an taigh e.
    An dèidh na sgoile, bha e ag obair ann an Sasainn agus Èirinn. An uair sin
    bha e air ais ann an Alanais airson greis. Tron chuid as motha de na
    tritheadan bha e ann an Lunnainn. Aig an àm sin bha na Natsaich is
    Faisistich ag èirigh air feadh na Roinn Eòrpa.
    Bha e fhèin is ceannard propaganda nan Natsach, Rolf Hoffmann, a’
    sgrìobhadh gu càch a chèile. Bha Dòmhnall a’ gabhail ‘Derrick’ air fhèin
    aig amannan – agus cuideachd ‘British Fascist’. Bha beachdan nimheil aige
    air Iùdhaich.
    Bha Grannd ag ràdh gun d’ fhuair e cuireadh a dhol a dh’fhuireach anns a’
    Ghearmailt le teaghlach Gearmailteach airson ceithir seachdainean. As
    t-samhradh naoi ceud deug, trithead ʼs a naoi (1939), chaidh e ann. Bha
    mòran a’ teicheadh às a’ Ghearmailt aig an àm sin. Chì sinn dè thachair dha
    an-ath-sheachdain.