The Oklahoman

Each time virus takes a WWII veteran, ‘we lose a part of history’

Heroes are dying in nursing homes without loved ones at their side

- Marco della Cava

Albert Berard was part of the first wave of U.S. soldiers who approached France’s Omaha Beach on D-Day, June 6, 1944. The signalman’s landing craft had sailed into hell. All around Berard, men were cut down in a haze of bullets and blood. One explosion resulted in something landing on his back. It was a severed arm. He was 19. Nearly 76 years later, Berard lay in his bed in a Massachuse­tts nursing home dying from complicati­ons of COVID-19. He died without family at his side on April 27. He was 95. “These men risked going to war and dying in a foreign place all alone, and now they’re dying away from home without anyone,” says his son, WayneDanie­l Berard, 68. “We know this generation is old and dying. But they deserve to have people around them. That’s the heartbreak­ing thing.” With the corona virus disproport­ionately claiming the elderly, especially nursing home residents, some worry it could accelerate the passing of World War II veterans, those 16 million American servicemen and women heralded for their heroic exploits and selfless sacrifice in a conflict that killed 407,317. Today, only about 300,000 WWII vets remain. No organizati­on is keeping track of the virus fatality rate of this specific cohort. But a USA TODAY search of 170,000 obituaries published so far in 2020 has found almost 700 mentioned COVID-19 as a contributi­ng cause of death, and of those, a little more than 1 in 25 were identified as World W ar II vets. What the virus is taking away, veterans-group officials and historians say, is a priceless chapter of the American story, one marked by the defeat of a Nazi Germany regime that claimed 11 million Jewish and non-Jewish victims during its attempt to take over Europe. That history never leaves us. On May 8, the world marked the 75th anniversar­y of V-E Day, or Victory in Europe, the day Nazi Germany surrendere­d. Looming are Memorial Day, which honors the death of all U.S. military personnel, and the June 6 anniversar­y of D-Day, when Allied forces successful­ly attacked German troops in France in a victory that ultimately turned the tide in the war. “The tragedy of COVID-19 speeding up our loss of these great people is that when they go, we lose a part of history,” says Keith Huxen, senior director of research and history at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. “What they went through in their lives is unimaginab­le to us today,” he says. “Living through the Great

“The value of having (World War II veterans) around is that they are inspiratio­nal. They are the true children of democracy.” Keith Huxen World War II historian

Depression for one, and then going to war. The value of having them around is that they are inspiratio­nal. They are the true children of democracy.”

Huxen says anyone looking for inspiratio­n should stream a video interview of a veteran through the museum’s website, nationalww­2museum.org.

Young people, says Huxen, can get insights into how this generation “overcame tremendous odds.”

“But what you really take away from these guys is they always say they fought for the same thing: their buddies,” he says. “It was personal to them. And in some ways, we can relate to that now. We make sacrifices so that others around us don’t get sick.”

There are big differences between the two epochal challenges. During WWII, a wartime economy drove unemployme­nt down to 1.2% in 1944, in contrast to today’s economic shutdown and 15% jobless rate.

And where that war saw Americans bond against a common military foe, today divergent state- and even countyleve­l approaches to lifting stay-at-home orders speak to a yawning divide about the best way to reopen the nation.

WWII veteran Paul Grassey, 97, of Savannah, Georgia, says the nation should and can find that sense of common purpose again.

“We fought a war and won it in 31⁄

2 years after a great national effort, and that’s the only thing we can do today with this virus, come together to beat it,” says Grassey, a B-24 bomber pilot who received France’s Legion of Honor medal for helping liberate that country from the Nazis.

But, Grassey laments, “we’re working with half the country. We need to get everyone behind this movement; we can’t have one guy saying one thing and another guy saying it’s all wrong.”

In echoes of WWII, Grassey adds that “we need to get our factories all working to make things we need to fight this, and we need a Marshall Plan for the world,” a reference to the American blueprint for rebuilding a decimated Europe.

Most of his brothers-in-arms are gone, and he’s being careful in these coronaviru­s times, washing his hands often and not venturing out much. He’s soldiering on, upset only by the current state of the national mood.

“I’m an American,” Grassey says. “All I want to see is us get together again.”

Veterans’ gallant, humble lives

It remains unclear if the U.S. will find that unified spirit so evident 80 years ago, says Douglas Brinkley, professor of history at Houston’s Rice University and author of the WWII chronicle “The Boys of Pointe du Hoc: Ronald Reagan, DDay, and the U.S. Army 2nd Ranger Battalion.”

“In World War II, we were all in it together, but in fighting COVID-19 it almost seems we’re in a neo-Civil War due to our deeply polarized society,” he says.

Brinkley says one enduring memory of his many interviews with WWII vets during his time as director of the Eisenhower Center for American Studies at the University of New Orleans was “how proud they all seemed to be of the unity the country showed, how the U.S. appeared as this shining city on the hill.”

A look through some of the obituaries of WWII veterans felled by complicati­ons from coronaviru­s reveals glimpses into quietly impressive lives.

There’s Harold L. Hayes, who died April 2 at age 96 in Ft. Wright, Kentucky. The war put college on hold and Hayes joined the Navy, where he was an original member of the Underwater Demolition Team, a precursor to the Navy Seals. He forged a career at General Electric, was a lifelong athlete, became active in local politics and was a devoted father and grandfathe­r.

And Dominick J. D’Stefan, who died April 13 at age 92 in Florham Park, New Jersey. During the war, he was a radar technician on the USS Worcester, which seeded his lifelong passion for electronic­s. D’Stefan went on to work at Bell Labs, where he met his wife, Shirley, and worked on the Telstar Project, the first successful transmissi­on of a radio wave to a target in space and back.

Some obits put a spotlight on the women who helped the war effort, which included millions who headed from farms to factories to build the armaments of war.

Mary Ann Yazzie died May 2 at age 96 in Farmington, New Mexico. During the war, Yazzie, a member of the Navajo Nation, moved to Utah and worked in a factory making nuts and bolts and other parts for the war effort. Her varied offreservatio­n jobs included teacher, police officer and horse trainer. Describing her as very healthy and only on blood pressure medication, Yazzie’s relatives said she had expected to live many more years. Coronaviru­s dashed those hopes.

In almost every case, the obituaries note that a private family memorial would be held at a later date. For many family members, what also is missing are the various military honors that often accompany the burial of a veteran.

“A lot of people aren’t receiving what they should, which includes guns firing, bugles playing and a flag being passed along to loved ones,” says Doc Schmitz, national commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Kansas City, Missouri-based organizati­on with 1.6 million members.

“We’re keeping lists and letting families know that down the road, our local VFW teams will do these honors,” he says. “We will give something these great men and women should have had.”

‘We haven’t forgotten you’

Wayne-Daniel Berard, a professor of

English at Nichols College in Dudley, Massachuse­tts, remembers his father as a man who could build or fix anything.

“We’d joke, if dad were God, he’d have built the world in five days and even a little bit better,” he says of his father, who spent his life as a metal worker in Taunton, Massachuse­tts, near the Rhode Island border. He rewired the family house and later replaced all its plumbing. When he wasn’t building things, he was teaching others how to do so.

For many years, Albert Berard wouldn’t tell his two sons, Wayne-Daniel and Donald, much about his time at war. He quit high school to enlist, feeling obliged as an American citizen of proud French heritage to help liberate France. But what he endured were horrors.

Finally, stories emerged, like the one about that day on Omaha Beach, an assault for which he would get the French Legion of Honor. When Steven Spielberg’s “Saving Private Ryan” came out in 1998, with its terrifying and by many accounts accurate depiction of the D-Day landing, matriarch Genevieve Berard refused to go.

“So we went with Dad, and when that opening scene starts with them approachin­g Omaha Beach, he said, ‘Look, that landing craft there, that’s what I was in,’ ” says Wayne-Daniel Berard. “Afterward, he said what he went through was far worse, which says something.”

Shortly before Albert Berard died, his sons were told that his nursing home had some patients with COVID-19, but their dad was safe.

But then he did contract the virus, and was placed with five others in a dining room that doubled as an isolation ward.

“I couldn’t get close, I couldn’t talk to him,” Wayne-Daniel Berard says softly. “So I went with a sign, which said, ‘We love you, we haven’t forgotten you.’ But he couldn’t see it.”

Albert Berard was a devoted Catholic. When he passed, Wayne-Daniel Berard was adamant about getting last rites administer­ed since he knew that would mean a lot to his father.

After calling around, he found a priest in St. Louis who was willing to conduct the rite by phone with the help of a nursing home worker who provided the olive oil necessary for the benedictio­n. It was the best he could do, but the image still haunts.

“Men like my father, these veterans, they’re 96, 97, 98, of course we know they’re going to go soon, but they deserve better than this,” he says.

The only positive thing, he adds, is that his father was ready to go after his wife passed a few years back.

“He adored her,” says Wayne-Daniel Berard. “Dad would say, ‘When I was in the war, all I wanted to do was get back to your mother. Now we’re in another war, and I just want to get back to her again.’ ”

 ?? MATTHEW STEPHAN ?? Paul Grassey, 97, flew bombers during World War II. He is staying as safe as he can be during these coronaviru­s times, given that the virus is especially deadly to the elderly.
MATTHEW STEPHAN Paul Grassey, 97, flew bombers during World War II. He is staying as safe as he can be during these coronaviru­s times, given that the virus is especially deadly to the elderly.
 ??  ?? Wayne-Daniel Berard stands next to his father, Albert Berard, a World War II veteran. The elder Berard died April 27 due to complicati­ons from COVID-19. WAYNE-DANIEL BERARD
Wayne-Daniel Berard stands next to his father, Albert Berard, a World War II veteran. The elder Berard died April 27 due to complicati­ons from COVID-19. WAYNE-DANIEL BERARD
 ??  ?? Paul Grassey, bottom row and second from left, is pictured with his fellow airmen during World War II. Grassey believes the unified nature of American sentiment 80 years ago was critical to defeating the Axis powers. PAUL GRASSEY
Paul Grassey, bottom row and second from left, is pictured with his fellow airmen during World War II. Grassey believes the unified nature of American sentiment 80 years ago was critical to defeating the Axis powers. PAUL GRASSEY
 ??  ?? A young Albert Berard is pictured shortly after joining the U.S. Navy. Berard died recently at age 95 due to complicati­ons from COVID-19.
A young Albert Berard is pictured shortly after joining the U.S. Navy. Berard died recently at age 95 due to complicati­ons from COVID-19.

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