Back to my War history hijack;
I watched the film Hacksaw Ridge the other day. Its a true story about an American conscientious objector, Desmond Doss, who served as a combat medic in WW2. In the film, they try to get him discharged, through abuse & court marshal, because of his refusal to handle a gun.
In real life, he served as a medic. He received two Bronze Star medals for bravery at Guam & Leyte, and then the Medal of Honour, during the Battle of Okinawa, where he rescued 75 of his own men, whilst the battlefield was occupied by the enemy.
Towards the end of the film, directed by Mel Gibson, Doss is stretchered off the battlefield. In real life, '
Doss had another wounded man take his place on the stretcher. After treating the soldier, a sniper shot & fractured Doss' arm and he crawled to safety after being left alone for five hours. Gibson omitted this from the film because he felt that the audience would not find the scene believable'. (citation wiki).
He lived to survive the War, and died in 2006 aged 87.
You can read his Medal of Honour citation, at the foot of this Wikipedia page;
Desmond Doss - Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmond_Doss