U.S. European Command
SAINTE-MÈRE-EGLISE, France, June 6, 2012
– When Eugene Cook jumped into Normandy during the predawn hours of June 6,
1944, he landed several miles from his intended drop zone.
Alone in the dark French countryside,
the young 101st Airborne Division paratrooper from Georgia assembled his rifle,
got his bearings and began looking for other Americans among Normandy’s
hedgerows. In the days and weeks that followed, Cook took part in the
now-famous battles that began the liberation of France and led to Allied
victory over Nazi Germany.
Cook, 87, was among the handful of World
War II veterans who attended the 68th anniversary of the D-Day landings here
this week. U.S. service members from all the military branches took part in
honoring the veterans, something Cook said he was glad to see.
“We have to commemorate the lives of the
guys we left here,” Cook said. “They gave their lives for us, and we should
show them thanks.”
Known as Operation Overlord, the D-Day
landings of June 6, 1944, combined U.S. and Allied air drops with beach
landings along Normandy’s coast. U.S. paratroopers from the 82nd and 101st
Infantry Divisions dropped onto the Cotenin peninsula to secure bridges, roads
and towns vital to allowing the troops landing at nearby Utah Beach to move
inland.
“That day, 68 years ago, as American
blood mixed with French soil, it cemented even further the strong bonds between
our two nations,” said U.S. Army Secretary John McHugh said as visited the La
Fiere drop zone.
For the returning veterans there was a
mix of feelings -- glad to be alive and sharing good times and sorrowful
memories of those who’d died.
Yesterday -- a cold and overcast day --
John Perrozi walked between rows of white marble gravestones at the Normandy
American Cemetery, overlooking Omaha Beach. He stopped at one cross and then
another, paying his respects to several buddies who died fighting in Normandy.
As an 82nd Airborne Division paratrooper, Perozzi fought on D-Day with the
505th Parachute Infantry Regiment. It was his first trip back since the war.
During a June 3 ceremony at the La Fière
drop zone, a battlefield where Perozzi fought, he received France’s highest
military medal, the Légion d'Honneur. Before the ceremony, thousands of
spectators watched as U.S. and international paratroopers recreate D-Day’s
airborne operations -- jumping from U.S. Air Force planes onto the “Iron Mike”
drop zone near the La Fière bridge -- at the Mederet River just west of
Sainte-Mère-Eglise.
Soldiers from the Fort Bragg,
N.C.,-based U.S. Army Civil Affairs & Psychological Operations Command and
the Kaiserslautern, Germany-based 5th Quartermaster Detachment were among the
hundreds of paratroopers who took part.
The Liberty Jump Team, which includes
veterans from other conflicts and civilian parachutists, also jumped. Dave De
Soucy, a retired officer from California who served in combat with the 101st
Airborne Division during Vietnam, was one of the first to land in La Fiere’s
marshy drop zone -- an area that was flooded on D-Day where several 82nd
paratroopers drowned on D-Day, stuck in their chutes and harnesses. Packing up
his chute, De Soucy said commemorative jumps honor World War II paratroopers,
but also remind people about our current military operations.
“It’s an almost overwhelming
experience,” said De Soucy, pausing as emotions welled inside him. “We’ve got
to remember the folks who did it and those who still do it -- the one percent
who go into harm’s way for the benefit of the [other] 99 percent.”
Afterward, Charles Rivkin, U.S.
Ambassador to France, jumped with the Golden Knights, the U.S. Army’s parachute
demonstration team. Then spectators, dignitaries, soldiers and veterans
gathered on the grassy slope nearby for a series of commemorative speeches and
wreath presentations.
John Roman, 87, who came ashore with the
4th Infantry Division, was surprised to hear a German military band at the
ceremony, playing “Glory, Glory Hallelujah.” Seeing German troops didn’t bother
him, he said.
“You’ve got to forget, some time,” Roman
said. “It’s good that they are here. Maybe, the world will be better off.”
Toward the end of the war, Roman met a
young French woman, Jacqueline, at a café. They’ve been married 66 years and
had six children, she said. Each year, they come back, as Roman wants to
remember buddies he lost, she said.
When wind gusts caught the beret of a
German soldier, Jacqueline Roman watched in amazement as Lt. Gen. Mark
Hertling, commander of U.S. Army Europe, walked over and knelt down to pick up
the beret off the dirt, then handed it back to the German.
“That’s the American way,” she said. “That
was wonderful.”
After World War II, there were 16
million living American veterans. Now, many are reaching their final years.
U.S. troops cherished the opportunity to speak with them, to shake their hands
and hear their stories.
“You can learn firsthand about history
from these veterans,” Hertling said. “Not a lot has changed. They had the same
fears and anxiety as they went into combat and the trauma from the things they
faced. They teach our soldiers a lot about what that means.”
One older paratrooper hugged Army Staff
Sgt. Rachel Medley, 34, of Eureka, Calif., who serves with the Golden Knights.
Meeting soldiers from World War II is humbling, she said.
“They paved the path for the way the
world is today,” Medley said. “The time is rapidly approaching when it won’t be
living history anymore. It will be just something we read about in books
because there will be no one who witnessed this. For us to be here and say
thank you, it’s a huge honor to be in their presence.”
U.S. troops and veterans marched through
Sainte-Mère-Eglise, where they were honored with a banquet in the town square.
Similar events were held throughout the area during the days leading up to this
year’s D-Day commemoration.
Earlier in the week, on June 2, U.S.
Special Operations Forces demonstrated a high altitude, low opening jump near
the historic Norman town of Mont Saint Michel. Army Capt. Stephen Cargill, an
officer from the Stuttgart, Germany-based 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces
Group, said free falling above Normandy meant a lot to him.
“It’s just amazing to get the
opportunity to see something so incredible,” Cargill said. “It hits that much
closer to home, to land on hallowed ground.”
One evening, Cargill and fellow Special
Forces soldiers relaxed outdoors near the Stop Café, a famous gathering spot in
Sainte-Mère-Eglise. Troops mingled with French people wearing old-fashioned
uniforms. One Dutch teen, Rob Van Meel, 13, cautiously approached the Green
Berets in his authentic World War II uniform of a 101st Airborne Division
soldier.
While many French children ask U.S.
troops for a souvenir, Van Meel just asked about their patches. Impressed with
Van Meel’s detailed uniform, Army Master Sgt. Damon Storey got down and
presented Van Meel with a set of combat jump wings -- a treasured possession.
Van Meel attended D-Day anniversaries in Normandy every year of his life, he
said. In fact, his first costume was as a World War II ammunition box at just 3
months old. He thanked Storey, but said he wouldn’t wear the jump wings on the
Screaming Eagles uniform, as it wouldn’t have been historically correct.
A handful of aging U.S. and Allied
veterans attended several ceremonies over the course of week. Ellan Levitsky
Orkin, 92, and her sister Dorothy, 95, who served together in Normandy as U.S.
Army nurses, were offered honorary French citizenship during a June 4 ceremony
in Bolleville. They helped unveil a new memorial to World War II medics, near
where they served with the 164th Field Hospital. They come back every year, but
they don’t quite understand all the excitement, Orkin said.
“We came and had a job to do and we went
home,” she said. “When we went home, nobody asked us questions then and we
didn’t talk about it. It was too painful.”
Still, some veterans are willing to
share their tales. And they don’t mind using newer technology if it means
bridging the gap of miles. Milt Staley, 93, of Redding, Calif., waded through
chest-deep surf onto Utah Beach on D-Day with the 4th Infantry Division. He
first returned in 2011 and has since kept in touch with his French friends on
Facebook.
When Staley visits the church at
Sainte-Mère-Eglise, he remembers occupying foxholes dug earlier by 82nd
Airborne Division paratroopers. Afterward, Staley fought with the 90th Infantry
Division and was wounded in combat. Coming back to France is not about reliving
the horrors of war, he said. It’s about sharing time with people in France.
“I was never hugged and kissed and
thanked so much for what we did,” Staley said. “It amazed and overwhelmed me
and I think I’ll never forget it.”
Cook, on the other hand, has returned
many times. He also looks forward to seeing people he’s met before, plus
reflecting on some of his wartime thoughts, he said.
“This brings back the memories of the
guys we were with here,” Cook said. “It’s important that we rededicate ourselves
to their sacrifice and D-Day helps us do that.”
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