The News-Times

Queen honors D-Day veterans at moving ceremony

-

PORTSMOUTH, England — Queen Elizabeth II and world leaders including President Donald Trump gathered Wednesday on the south coast of England to honor the troops who risked and sacrificed their lives 75 years ago on D-Day, a bloody but ultimately triumphant turning point in World War II.

Across the Channel, American and British paratroope­rs dropped into northweste­rn France and scaled cliffs beside Normandy beaches, recreating the daring, costly invasion that helped liberate Europe from Nazi occupation.

With the number of veterans of World War II dwindling, the guests of honor at an internatio­nal ceremony in Portsmouth were several hundred men, now in their 90s, who served in the conflict — and the 93-year-old British monarch, also a member of what has been called the “greatest generation.”

The queen, who served as an army mechanic during the war, said that when she attended a 60th-anniversar­y commemorat­ion of D-Day 15 years ago, many thought it might be the last such event.

“But the wartime generation — my generation — is resilient,” she said, striking an unusually personal note.

“The heroism, courage and sacrifice of those who lost their lives will never be forgotten,” the monarch said. “It is with humility and pleasure, on behalf of the entire country — indeed the whole free world — that I say to you all, thank you.”

Several hundred World War II veterans, aged 91 to 101, attended the ceremony in Portsmouth, the English port city from where many of the troops embarked for Normandy on June 5, 1944.

Many will recreate their journey, with less danger and more comfort, by crossing the Channel by ship to Normandy overnight. They are due to attend commemorat­ions Thursday in Bayeux, the first major town liberated by Allied troops after D-Day.

Mixing history lesson, entertainm­ent and solemn remembranc­e, the ceremony in Portsmouth was a large-scale spectacle involving troops, dancers and martial bands, culminatin­g in a military fly-past. But the stars of the show were the elderly veterans of that campaign who said they were surprised by all the attention: They were just doing their jobs.

“I was just a small part in a very big machine,” said 99-yearold John Jenkins, a veteran from Portsmouth, who received a standing ovation as he addressed the event.

“You never forget your comrades because we were all in it together,” he said. “It is right that the courage and sacrifice of so many is being honored 75 years on. We must never forget.”

The event, which kicked off two days of D-Day anniversar­y observance­s, paid tribute to the troops who shaped history during the dangerous mission to reach beachheads and fight in German-occupied France.

D-Day saw more than 150,000 Allied troops land on the beaches of Normandy in northwest France on June 6, 1944, carried by 7,000 boats. The Battle of Normandy, codenamed Operation Overlord, was a turning point in the war, and helped bring about Nazi Germany’s defeat in May 1945.

Wednesday’s ceremony brought together presidents, prime ministers and other representa­tives of more than a dozen countries that fought alongside Britain in Normandy.

The leader of the country that was the enemy in 1944 , German Chancellor Angela Merkel, also attended— a symbol of Europe’s postwar reconcilia­tion and transforma­tion.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who attended 70th anniversar­y commemorat­ions in France five years ago, has not been invited. Russia was not involved in D-Day but was instrument­al in defeating the Nazis on the Eastern Front.

The ceremony sought to take people back in time, with world leaders, reading the words of participan­ts in the conflict.

Trump read a prayer that President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered in a radio address on June 6, 1944, extolling the “mighty endeavor” Allied troops were engaged in.

British Prime Minister Theresa May read a letter written by Capt. Norman Skinner of the Royal Army Service Corps to his wife, Gladys, on June 3, 1944, a few days before the invasion. He was killed the day after DDay.

“Although I would give anything to be back with you, I have not yet had any wish at all to back down from the job we have to do,” he wrote.

French President Emmanuel Macron read from a letter sent by a young resistance fighter, Henri Fertet, before he was executed at the age of 16 years old.

“I am going to die for my country. I want France to be free and the French to be happy,” it said.

The ceremony ended with singer Sheridan Smith performing the wartime hit “We’ll Meet Again,” as many of the elderly assembled veterans sang along.

Then WWII Spitfire and Hurricane fighter jets, modernday Typhoons and the Royal Air Force’s Red Arrows aerobatic unit swooped over the dignitarie­s, veterans and large crowd of spectators.

The crowd beyond the security barriers loved the planes but loved the veterans even more. Whenever their images came up on the big screen, people cheered. The former servicemen have reacted to such shows of attention with humility and surprise, as many believed they had been forgotten.

“What happened to me is not important. I’m not a hero. I served with men who were,” said Les Hammond, 94, who landed at Juno Beach with the Royal Electrical Mechanical Engineers. “I’m very lucky I’m a survivor.”

On Thursday the focus shifts to France, where commemorat­ions will be held at simple military cemeteries near the Normandy beaches.

Events in France began early Wednesday morning with U.S. Army Rangers climbing the jagged limestone cliffs of Normandy’s Pointe du Hoc to honor the men who scaled them under fire 75 years ago.

 ?? Christophe­r Furlong / Getty Images ?? D-Day veteran John Hutton, aka Jock, 94, comes in to land after he joined parachutis­ts, in full Allied uniforms, in a parachute drop onto fields at Sannervill­e on Wednesday at Sannervill­e, France. Veterans, families, visitors and military personnel are gathering in Normandy on June 6th to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the Normandy Landings which heralded the Allied advance towards Germany and victory in Europe 11 months later. Below, D-Day veteran Harry Read, 95, comes into land.
Christophe­r Furlong / Getty Images D-Day veteran John Hutton, aka Jock, 94, comes in to land after he joined parachutis­ts, in full Allied uniforms, in a parachute drop onto fields at Sannervill­e on Wednesday at Sannervill­e, France. Veterans, families, visitors and military personnel are gathering in Normandy on June 6th to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the Normandy Landings which heralded the Allied advance towards Germany and victory in Europe 11 months later. Below, D-Day veteran Harry Read, 95, comes into land.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States