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Normandy -- 60 Years After D-Day
Deutche Welle ^ | June 04 2004 | Cornelia Rabitz

Posted on 06/04/2004 10:03:10 AM PDT by knighthawk

Sixty years later, the D-Day landing of Allied troops in Normandy on June 6, 1944 is ever-present. The area has become an important tourist destination for visitors and veterans from throughout the world.

Cafés in Normandy are called "Libération" and "Six Juin." Museums are devoted to the heroism of the Allies. Shops sell tourists toy fighter planes, tanks, flags and t-shirts as souvenirs. Memorials and statues honoring the Allied dead decorate the area. But it's still difficult to imagine D-Day, June 6, 1944, on the long, broad Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword beaches that still carry the names given to them by the Allies as they prepared their missions.

"When the Allies landed it was an hour after low tide. So they had about 300 meters, about 1,000 feet, of open beach to cover before they got to the sand dunes," Irish guide Edward Robinson explained.

"The beach was covered with anti-landing craft and anti-tank obstacles. The German defenders had a very good defensive position to fight from. They had quite high, sandy cliffs, easy to dig into, easy to set up machine gun positions."

Scars of war

Huge, ugly cement blocks -- the remains of the artificial port the British improvised to allow supplies in -- stand just before the beach in Arromanches, where the official commemoration ceremony will take place on June 6. Arromanches is now a lively beach town with cafés and souvenir shops and a pretty promenade. French, British, American, Danish and Swedish visitors of all ages flock to see the D-Day documentation in the numerous museums.

Low tide attracts people riding horses and swimmers. Visitors examine the scars: bunkers, military vehicles, bomb craters. Veterans come too, exchanging memories. For the most part, they've gotten over the old definitions of who was friend, and who was foe. They survived, and that's what counts. After the war, many devoted themselves to the reconciliation effort.

"We had a good relationship to the French people. And it still shows today," German veteran Alexander Uhlig said. Uhlig and others from his parachute regiment travel to Normandy every few years, where they visit the places they remember from the war.

"There we're invited for a glass of Calvados or cider by some old people who know us from back then -- very friendly. And the French also say -- well, they were liberated -- but they say: 'As long as the Germans were here, everything was in order,'" Uhlig recounted.

The war left graves, memorials and cemeteries in Normandy. Over 9,000 soldiers are buried at the U.S. military cemetery near Colleville, above Omaha Beach. White crosses bedeck the graves laid out in geometrically precise rows on closely cut lawns befitting the armed forces. The nearby cemetery for British soldiers is reminiscent of an English park with its benches and flower beds.

The German cemetery in La Cambe, in contrast, is a cramped, bleak areal. More than 20,000 German troops are buried in the dark, shadowy graveyard dominated by a memorial to the unknown soldier.

Home of the paratroopers

The village Sainte-Mère-Eglise, which claims to have been the first place liberated by the Americans, is just a few kilometers away. The town's only hotel, "Auberge John Steele," is just one indication of how this village commemorates the Allied paratroopers. John Steele was an Allied soldier who got caught on a church spire while parachuting into Sainte-Mère-Eglise in 1944. For fear of the German occupiers, he played dead for hours until he was helped down.

Raymond Paris was a young eyewitness to the arrival of the paratroopers. "You could see it well, it was broad daylight," he remembers. "The doors of the airplanes were open, and out of all these airplanes came the paratroopers -- everywhere, Americans were falling from the sky."

Many of the former liberators kept in touch with Sainte-Mère-Eglise, visiting over the years. Veterans' clubs and the league of paratroopers donated the church organ. The late John Steele became the village hero -- a puppet now hangs from the church spire commemorating his spectacular jump.

On June 6, Normandy will be celebrating. There'll be much flag-waving, pomp, and ceremony. The French Air Force will put on a show of trick manoeuvres. Along with tens of thousands of veterans, leaders from throughout the world will commemorate the liberation.

But there'll be one important difference to all the previous celebrations. For the first time, a sitting German chancellor will be included. Gerhard Schröder will join Jacques Chirac, Tony Blair, George W. Bush, and 5,800 other guests to look up in the skies over Normandy.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: dday; normandy; wwii

1 posted on 06/04/2004 10:03:10 AM PDT by knighthawk
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To: MizSterious; rebdov; Nix 2; green lantern; BeOSUser; Brad's Gramma; dreadme; Turk2; keri; ...

Ping


2 posted on 06/04/2004 10:03:30 AM PDT by knighthawk (Some people say that we'll get nowhere at all, let 'em tear down the world but we ain't gonna fall)
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To: knighthawk
And they said democracy was finished and only fascism would survive, especially in Germany where the culture forbade anything but a stern ruler.

Hey, aren't they saying the same thing about the Arabs today?
3 posted on 06/04/2004 10:08:11 AM PDT by gilliam
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To: knighthawk

I know it's PBS and Cronkite, but.... On Sunday evening PBS will broadcast Cronkite's two-hour interview with Eisenhower, recorded in 1964, in Normandy.


4 posted on 06/04/2004 10:17:30 AM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: knighthawk

5 posted on 06/04/2004 10:21:57 AM PDT by bmwcyle (<a href="http://www.johnkerry.com/" target="_blank">miserable failure)
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To: gilliam

Unfortunately, there is no dejihadification program in place, so the situation is not quite analagous.


6 posted on 06/04/2004 10:46:57 AM PDT by sheik yerbouty
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To: knighthawk

Bump for D-Day and the liberation of a now largely ungrateful Continent.


7 posted on 06/04/2004 10:51:20 AM PDT by StoneColdGOP (McClintock - In Your Heart, You Know He's Right)
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To: Rummyfan
Thanks for the heads up.
I seldom watch PBS, but will try to catch that.

CD

8 posted on 06/04/2004 10:53:05 AM PDT by Constitution Day (Rush may be "show prep for the media", but FR is show prep for RUSH!)
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To: nutmeg

read later bump


9 posted on 06/05/2004 10:02:34 PM PDT by nutmeg (God bless President Ronald Reagan)
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