Malta,
a group of Islands between Sicily and Tunisia, was a British Colony until 1964.
It was a major British Supply and Radar Outpost during World War 2 being in the
middle of the Mediterranean between the British Base in Gibraltar and British
Egypt.
It
was situated 50 miles from Fascist Italy and 176 miles from German-Occupied
Vichy French Tunisia and was the heaviest bombed area of the whole world, in
terms of area and population.
The
Germans and Italians hoped to starve the island out of the War. The only way
being to supply the Island was through Allied Convoys by Sea (5,700 Allied
Soldiers were killed in the “Malta Convoys” alone.)
The
Siege of Malta lasted from June 11, 1940 – November 20, 1942 with the German
and Italian Air Forces making 3,000 Bombing Raids over Malta and dropping 6,700
tons of bombs. The British (along with the Canadians, Australians, New
Zealanders, South Africans, Australians and Americans) defended Malta.
The
Mosta Dome (built in 1610) survived the bombings including on April 9, 1942
when a 110 lbs. German bomb landed inside the Basilica, where 300 Maltese
Civilians were sheltering and praying and failed to explode.
2,301
Allied Airmen were killed and 1,300 Maltese Civilians were killed. 30,000
Buildings were destroyed.
The
Siege was lifted after the American Landings in French North Africa in November
1942.
I
visited Malta with my Class and saw the different World War 2 sites (the Mosta
Dome, the Opera House Ruins, etc.) as well as other historical and cultural
places.
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