Chattanooga Times Free Press

France asks for personal accounts of liberation from Nazis, 80 years after D-Day

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PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday called on the public to collect photos, films, personal journals and testimony from witnesses to liberation at the end of World War Two, as the country prepares to mark the 80th anniversar­y of the Normandy landings which heralded the beginning of the end for Nazi Germany.

“Let’s share and inscribe our families’ memories in our nation’s history,” Macron said in a video message posted on social media. “Let’s honor our liberators and let the young generation carry our memories into the future.”

In June, France plans to show its gratitude towards World War II veterans with a ceremony at Omaha Beach to commemorat­e the 80th anniversar­y of D-Day, when 160,000 troops from the U.S., Britain, Canada and other nations landed in Normandy on June 6, 1944.

Many veterans are expected to return to Normandy beaches, some after a long trans-Atlantic journey, despite advanced age, fatigue and physical difficulti­es.

Macron specifical­ly called on schoolchil­dren and teachers around the country to help research heroes from Africa, the Pacific, and elsewhere in the world, who helped liberate France. He emphasized the importance of linking the last witnesses of the war and those who sacrificed for freedom and liberty, enjoyed by the today’s youth.

“These young women and young men, like young people today, had their dreams and their plans for the future,” Macron said. “They had the courage to fight for freedom, against the Nazi barbarity, and often paid the price with their lives.”

A ceremony at Omaha Beach, with many heads of state expected to be present, will honor the contributi­on of the Allied troops. Over the coming months, France will also pay tribute to Resistance fighters from France and abroad, to soldiers recruited in its colonies in Africa, and to the civilians who suffered during the war.

In the past couple of years, commemorat­ions in Normandy also have taken on extra significan­ce as war returned to Europe with Russia’s fullscale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.

 ?? AP PHOTO/HARRY HARRIS ?? French civilians with hastily made American and French flags greet U.S. and Free French troops entering Paris on Aug. 25, 1944 after Allied liberation of the French capital from Nazi occupation in World War II.
AP PHOTO/HARRY HARRIS French civilians with hastily made American and French flags greet U.S. and Free French troops entering Paris on Aug. 25, 1944 after Allied liberation of the French capital from Nazi occupation in World War II.

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