The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lonely D-Day remembranc­e amid pandemic

- By Raf Casert

COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, FRANCE — At daybreak on Saturday, Charles Shay stood lonesome without any fellow veteran on the very same beach where he waded ashore 76 years ago, part of one of the most epic battles in military historic that came to be known as D-Day and turned the tide of World War II.

Compared with last year, when many tens of thousands came to the northern French beaches of Normandy to cheer the dwindling number of veterans and celebrate three-quarters of a century of liberation from Nazi oppression, the coronaviru­s lockdown turned this year’s remembranc­e into one of the eeriest ever.

“I am very sad now,” said Shay, who was a 19-year-old U.S. Army medic when he landed on Omaha Beach under horrific machine-gun fire and shells. “Because of the virus, nobody can be here. I would like to see more of us here,” he said.

Normally, 95-year-old Shay would be meeting other survivors of the 1944 battle and celebratin­g with locals and dignitarie­s alike, all not far from his home close to the beaches that defined his life.

“This year, I am one of the very few that is probably here,” he said, adding that other U.S. veterans could not fly in because of the pandemic.

When a full moon disappeare­d over land and the sun rose the other side over the English Channel, there was no customary rumble of columns of vintage jeeps and trucks to be heard, roads still so deserted that hares sat alongside them.

Still, the French would not let this day slip by unnoticed, such is their attachment to some 160,000 soldiers from the United States, Britain, Canada and other countries who spilled their blood to free foreign beaches and fight on to finally defeat

Nazism almost one year later.

“It’s a June 6 unlike any other,” said Philippe Laillier, the mayor of Saint-Laurentsur-Mer, who staged a small remembranc­e around the

Omaha Beach monument. “But still we had to do something. We had to mark it.”

The moment the sun broke over the ocean, the Omaha Beach theme from “Saving ▲

Private Ryan” blared across the sand for a few dozen locals and visitors dressed in vintage clothing.

The lack of a big internatio­nal crowd was palpable, though.

The pandemic has wreaked havoc across the world, infecting 6.7 million people, killing over 394,000 and devastatin­g economies. It poses a particular threat to the elderly — like the surviving D-Day veterans who are in their late 90s or older.

It has also affected the younger generation­s who turn out every year to mark the occasion. Most have been barred from traveling to the windswept coasts of Normandy.

It did not affect Ivan Thierry, 62, a local fisherman who catches sea bass around the wrecks that still litter the seabed nearby. He was holding an American flag in tribute even before dawn.

“There is not nobody here. Even if we are only a dozen, we are here to commemorat­e,” he said.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY VIRGINIA ?? Men in vintage U.S. WWII uniforms stand behind flowers left at Les Braves monument after a D-Day 76th anniversar­y ceremony Saturday in Saint-Laurentsur-Mer, France.
Charles Norman Shay, a D-Day WWII veteran from Maine, salutes Saturday after laying a wreath during a D-Day ceremony at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville­sur-Mer, France. Due to coronaviru­s measures, many ceremonies and memorials were canceled in the region.
PHOTOS BY VIRGINIA Men in vintage U.S. WWII uniforms stand behind flowers left at Les Braves monument after a D-Day 76th anniversar­y ceremony Saturday in Saint-Laurentsur-Mer, France. Charles Norman Shay, a D-Day WWII veteran from Maine, salutes Saturday after laying a wreath during a D-Day ceremony at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville­sur-Mer, France. Due to coronaviru­s measures, many ceremonies and memorials were canceled in the region.
 ?? MAYO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
MAYO / ASSOCIATED PRESS

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