shadows papa
06-06-2011, 08:45 AM
Today is the 67th anniversary of D-Day. On June 6, 1944, the start of Operation Overlord, Allied troops landed on the beaches of Normandy in an all out effort take back Europe from the Nazis. The generation that fought in this battle and the rest of WW II is disappearing as time marches on. I think we should take a minute out of our day to give thanks to the brave men and women who sacrificed so much in the name of Freedom.
http://623acw.com/dday/lst262_dday.sized.jpg
The_Lady_Snow
06-06-2011, 09:43 AM
:praying:
I for one am grateful!
Greyson
06-06-2011, 09:49 AM
Thanks for the reminder Shadow. My stepfather, Mr. Espinoza fought in that war. He is no longer here with us. He was a good and decent man.
Linus
06-06-2011, 09:54 AM
Never forget.
Ever.
A synopsis of Canada's involvement (as a young nation -- pop of 11,000,000 around 1942 -- since we were formed in 1867) in D-Day activities from CTV.ca (http://www.ctv.ca/generic/WebSpecials/d_day/index_canada.html)
CANADA'S ROLE
When D-Day finally arrived, Canadians had already made a significant contribution to the operation.
For several months, the Royal Canadian Air Force had been flying bombing sorties targeting roads, bridges, railways, airfields, and communications centres in the invasion area.
On the morning of June 6, 1944, they flew as an integral element of the 171 Allied squadrons sent to support the invasion on the ground and wrest control of the skies from the Luftwaffe.
At sea, Canadian destroyers HMCS Algonquin and HMCS Sioux were among the flotilla charged with pounding the Germans' coastal defences with a relentless artillery barrage.
Alongside the armed merchant cruisers HMCS Prince Henry and Prince David that carried the 14,000 Canadian troops toward shore, the destroyers' job was made easier by the work of minesweepers bearing the maple leaf.
Before the Allied armada set off for Normandy, Canadian minesweepers had cleared a safe path across the narrow English Channel.
The path may have been clear, but the weather was rough -- leaving the thousands of soldiers who were landing that morning -- as well as engineers, medics, and logistics personnel -- tired, cold and seasick before the battle had even begun.
Like their Allies landing up and down the 80-kilometre stretch of Normandy coast, the Canadians trying to liberate Juno Beach were greeted by deadly fire from Nazi batteries that had survived the initial naval and aerial bombardment.
The divisions landing on Juno were hardest hit that day, as tanks meant to lead the landing troops were forced by high waves to follow them ashore.
The result was a bloodbath -- as soldiers struggled to cross the few hundred metres of open beach between the shoreline and a sea wall. Only a handful survived.
But their bravery was emblematic of the heroism that drove Canadian troops further inland than any of their Allies on D-Day.
Noting the terrible cost of the day's victories, Veterans Affairs quotes a Canadian journalist’s account of the aftermath.
"The German dead were littered over the dunes, by the gun positions", he wrote at the time.
"By them, lay Canadians in bloodstained battledress, in the sand and in the grass, on the wire and by the concrete forts. ...They had lived a few minutes of the victory they had made. That was all."
Reflecting on the soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice that day, Veterans Affairs Minister John McCallum called it "almost incomprehensible."
"They jumped off the ships into water waist-deep, under heavy machine-gun fire. They died, or watched their friends die, beside them. They jumped out of planes into enemy territory.
"I don't think any of us can even conceive of even being called upon to do something like that for our country."
On that one day, 340 Canadians had given their lives.
Another 574 were wounded and 47 taken prisoner.
For more info on Juno Beach landings check this out: http://www.junobeach.org/e/2/can-eve-rod-nor-e.htm
SmoothButch
07-03-2011, 01:00 PM
Laerkin and I visited the beaches of Normandy when we were in France in 2009 vacationing. It was pretty moving being there looking off into the distance thinking to what it must've been like during that time. Kind of eerie when the wind would blow and imagining all the bloodshed that occurred in that sand. There is also an American gravesite and memorial close by and of course a visitor center as well. I won't ever forget.
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