'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (2024)

ByKatya Adler,BBC Europe editor

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (1)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (2)Marianne Baisnee

It’s impossible not to be swept away by the warmth and energy in the stone-clad villages up and down the Normandy coastline this 80th anniversary of D-Day.

British, US and Canadian flags flutter from garden gates and lampposts as far as the eye can see. Music from the 1940s drifts through village squares, while country lanes roar with column-upon-column of World War Two-era military jeeps.

Driving them are laughing, waving men and women from all over Europe. Germans, Dutch, Belgians and Brits from all walks of life, who this week have chosen to don Second World War Allied military uniforms, to honour the 150,000 soldiers who landed here in Nazi-occupied France on 6 June 1944 - changing the course of 20th-Century Europe as they did so.

How different things look now. After decades of Europeans pledging “never again”, war is back on this continent on a scale not seen since World War Two, with Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Eighty years ago, Germany was the enemy. Russia, a key ally. Its pyrrhic victory on the eastern front was fundamental, like the western front Allied assault that followed D-Day, in bringing Nazi Germany to its knees.

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (3)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (4)

Yet this Thursday, at the official international D-Day ceremony, Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with France’s President Emmanuel Macron, US President Joe Biden and the heir to the British throne, Prince William.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has been invited too. Russia’s Vladimir Putin most pointedly has not.

President Macron’s office insists the World War Two sacrifice of the Soviet people and their contribution to victory will be honoured this year as always. But it says “it will be remembered that the Eastern front was not just Russia, but also the Ukrainians, the Belarusians and all the other countries that were part of the USSR.”

The pain and humiliation of occupation, the deprivation of freedom facing or threatening millions in Ukraine, is something the Normands understand all too well. They make sure younger generations appreciate what Allied soldiers risked - and lost - to liberate them.

'They gave us our freedom'

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (5)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (6)Marianne Baisnee

The star attraction in Normandy this week is certainly not world leaders. It’s the surviving D-Day veterans, the youngest of whom are now in their 90s. Wherever they travel along the coast, they’re feted, photographed and fawned over, especially by the locals.

I met young mum Vanessa Foulon, queuing with her six-year-old son to get a D-Day commemorative cap signed by an American veteran. Why is this so important to them, I asked?

“Liberté” she said simply. “They gave us our freedom.” And she burst into tears.

“People here are nice,” 99-year-old US veteran Donald Cobb told me. “We enjoy coming back.”

He’d been taking part in a veterans’ march in picturesque Sainte-Marie-du-Mont. The streets here are festooned with banners claiming to be “the first liberated village”.

Donald remembers landing on nearby Omaha beach at 05:30 on 6 June 1944. The water was choppy, the wind biting, he says.

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (7)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (8)Marianne Baisnee

At 19, he must have been petrified.

“Honestly,” he said, “I would rather have been anywhere else.”

Yet his modesty was humbling.

“We did what we had to do,” he told me. “I don’t feel like a hero, I’m glad we were able to help. I feel good about that.”

France feels conflicted about its own wartime history. The country was split after it signed an armistice agreement with Nazi Germany in 1940. The Germans occupied northern France and all along the Atlantic coast, to the Spanish border. The south was managed by France’s Vichy government, which collaborated with the Nazis.

Yet D-Day events marking the contribution of French men and women who worked for the French Resistance seem somewhat muted, compared to the boisterous array of events commemorating Allied soldiers.

“I don’t forget them. Please don’t forget them,” urged Catherine Nivromont, looking at me intently with her clear blue eyes.

Catherine’s brother, Pierre, was just 17 in 1944. He worked with other Resistance members, gathering intelligence on German positions along the Normandy coast, to help Allied forces plan their June assault.

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (9)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (10)Marianne Baisnee

Pierre was in touch with locals who did German soldiers’ laundry. Their clothing was marked with battalion details, revealing the quantity and location of troops.

“Each person played their small part," Catherine said. "Under occupation, you had to resist silently, secretly. You never knew who you could trust.”

Both her brother, Pierre, and her father - who was also in the Resistance - were eventually betrayed by a Frenchman they had relied on to help make fake passports for Allied airmen stuck behind enemy lines.

Both men were sent to Nazi concentration camps, initially to Auschwitz, and were separated afterwards.

“I think his homeland was more important to him than family,” Catherine observed a little sadly. “The risks he took were huge.”

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (11)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (12)Catherine Nivromont

But you’re proud of him, I asked?

“Oh, yes. So proud. That is why I see it as my job to still visit schools and universities. To tell the youth what the Resistance did, and how much they sacrificed for us.”

It’s thought only 2% of French citizens worked full time for the Resistance, though they relied on a far broader network of people willing to help.

For such a small group, they’ve had a big influence on modern-day France too.

Many in the Resistance were left-leaning. A large proportion, communist. After the war, they helped set up the new French Republic, implementing France’s strong welfare and health system which is still firmly in place today.

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (13)'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (14)Marianne Baisnee

Back on Omaha beach, I found a group of European youngsters, energetically rehearsing a presentation of D-Day testimonies – including a French child, an Allied soldier, a frightened young German conscript and a resistance fighter - as part of Thursday’s international ceremony.

Why had they volunteered for the project? As a German-Austrian national, Helena told me she felt it important to send a message of peace.

“Freedom for all!” was the heartfelt priority for Kate from Ukraine.

But 80 years on from D-Day, storm clouds hang heavy over Europe. If President Putin is victorious in Ukraine, nearby nations like Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania fear they could be next.

Since World War Two, Europe has relied on the US to have its back in terms of security. But elections in Washington are fast approaching. If Donald Trump returns to the White House, he’s made clear to Europe’s leaders they should take nothing for granted.

Additional reporting from Kathy Long and Marianne Baisnee

Normandy

D-Day

France

Veterans

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy (2024)

FAQs

'They gave us freedom' - D-day veterans celebrated in Normandy? ›

The star attraction in Normandy this week is certainly not world leaders. It's the surviving D-Day veterans, the youngest of whom are now in their 90s. Wherever they travel along the coast, they're feted, photographed and fawned over, especially by the locals.

How many Americans died in Normandy? ›

(Read the article Sir John Keegan wrote for Britannica about the Normandy Invasion.) The estimated total battle casualties for the United States were 135,000, including 29,000 killed and 106,000 wounded and missing.

What does the D in D-Day stand for? ›

The French maintain the D means “disembarkation,” still others say “debarkation,” and the more poetic insist D-Day is short for “day of. decision.”

What was significant about the D-Day landing at Normandy on June 6, 1944? ›

The D-Day operation of June 6, 1944, brought together the land, air, and sea forces of the allied armies in what became known as the largest amphibious invasion in military history. The operation, given the codename OVERLORD, delivered five naval assault divisions to the beaches of Normandy, France.

What does "d-day" mean in slang? ›

Informal. any day of special significance, as one marking an important event or goal.

What happened to the bodies on Normandy Beach? ›

Today the Normandy American Cemetery, sited on a bluff high above the coast, is one of the world's best-known military memorials. These hallowed grounds preserve the remains of nearly 9,400 Americans who died during the Allied liberation of France. Three Medal of Honor recipients rest here.

What were the odds of surviving Normandy? ›

There is no definitive answer, but some historians have calculated, based on unit casualties against men landed, that Allied soldiers had a 97.6% chance of surviving D-Day. That isn't to say they would not get hit or wounded. Most infantrymen expected at one time to be hit.

What did soldiers call D-Day? ›

On 6 June 1944 – 'D-Day' – Allied forces launched the largest amphibious invasion in the history of warfare. Codenamed Operation 'Overlord', the Allied landings on the beaches of Normandy marked the start of a long and costly campaign to liberate north-west Europe from Nazi occupation.

Did D-Day end WWII? ›

It ended with heavy casualties — more than 9,000 Allied soldiers were killed or wounded in those first 24 hours — but D-Day is largely considered the successful beginning of the end of Hitler's tyrannical regime.

Was D-Day a success? ›

The war would not be over by Christmas. But D-Day had opened another major front, where the bulk of America's rapidly expanding army could at last be brought to bear. It led to the liberation of France, denying Germany any further exploitation of that country's economic and manpower resources.

What was Hitler's reaction to D-Day? ›

He had reacted with glee when the Allies launched their invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944, convinced that the enemy would be so utterly smashed on the beaches that the defeat would knock the British and Americans out of the war. Then he could concentrate all his armies on the eastern front against Stalin.

What went wrong on D-Day? ›

The paratroopers were badly scattered. Many were injured and killed during the attack, and much of their equipment was lost, but the brave paratroopers fought fiercely, causing confusion among the German commanders and keeping the German's troops occupied.

Why did Germany lose D-Day? ›

But German troops fought well on D-Day and then kept Allied forces bottled up in their lodgement area for seven weeks. They suffered from shortages of everything, received minimal reinforcements and were utterly exposed to the depredations of Allied air power.

What does D girl mean in slang? ›

A development girl or D-girl is a derogatory Hollywood slang term for non-influential, entry-level staff members in a film production company. Responsibilities include finding and identifying story ideas worthy of adaptation into a script and writing script coverage for scripts submitted to the production company.

What is D-Day in marriage? ›

It is called “D-Day” because the actual DD was the most momentous day in history for everyone that was alive. A wedding date requires precision planning, attention to detail, proper equipment and two brave souls to lead from the front. Very much a DD for the participants.

How many Americans died on D-Day? ›

Victims on all sides

A total of 4,414 Allied troops were killed on D-Day itself, including 2,501 Americans. More than 5,000 were wounded. In the ensuing Battle of Normandy, 73,000 Allied forces were killed and 153,000 wounded.

How many Americans died in the Battle of the Bulge? ›

Battle of the Bulge Memorial

Soldiers fought in brutal winter conditions, and the U.S. Army lost approximately 19,000 men (and suffered some 75,000 total casualties) in what became the United States' deadliest single World War II battle.

How many Americans died in Iwo Jima? ›

The assault units of the corps—Marines and organic Navy personnel—sustained 24,053 casualties, by far the highest single-action losses in Marine Corps history. Of these, a total of 6,140 died. Roughly one Marine or corpsman became a casualty for every three who landed on Iwo Jima.

How many paratroopers died on D-Day? ›

In all, 2,499 American paratroopers became casualties on D-Day. In the 82nd alone, 15 of the 16 battalion commanders in the infantry regiments were killed or wounded.

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